Retrospective Theses and Dissertations Iowa State University Capstones, Theses andDissertations
1991
Identifying and analyzing the factors utilized bysuperintendents in achieving their "personal best" ineducationDavid L. LongIowa State University
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Identifying and analyzing the factors utilized by superintendents in achieving their "personal best" in education
Long, David L., Ph.D.
Iowa State University, 1991
U M I SOON.ZeebRd. Ann Aibor, MI 48106
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Identifying and analyzing the factors utilized by superintendents
in achieving their "personal best" in education
by
David L Long
A Dissertation Submitted to the
Graduate Faculty in Partial Fulfillment of the
Requirements for the Degree of
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Department: Professional Studies in Education
Major: Education (Educational Administration)
roved:
e of MajoAwoiir
Major Department
For raduate College
Iowa State University Ames, Iowa
1991
Signature was redacted for privacy.
Signature was redacted for privacy.
Signature was redacted for privacy.
ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ABSTRACT 1
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION 3
Statement of the Problem 6
Purposes of the Study 6
Research Questions 7
Delimitation of the Study 8
Definitions of Terms ' 8
CHAPTER II. REVIEW OF UTERATURE 10
Introduction 10
School Leader Functions and Tasks 10
Beyond Tasks, Functions, and Skills 13
Private Sector 15
Summary of the Chapter 21
CHAPTER III. METHODS AND PROCEDURES 23
Survey Construction 23
Sample Selection and Collection of Data 24
iii
Page
CHAPTER IV. FINDINGS 28
Introduction 28
Background and Situational Features of the 28 "Personal Best"
Subject of "personal best" 30
Reason for selection of category 32
Length of personal best effort 32
Most important contributor 33
Perceptions and Feelings During Initiation, 34 Implementation, and Completion
Common Leadership Practices and 36 Strategies of Superintendents
Enabled others to act 38
Fostered collaboration 39
Strengthened others 43
Inspiring a shared vision 45
Envisioned the future 46
Enlisted others 48
Modeled the way 50
Set the example 51
Planned small wins 52
iv
Page
Encouraged the heart 53
Recognized individual contributions 53
Celebrated team accomplishments 54
Challenged the process 56
Searched for opportunities 57
Experimented and took risks 58
Personal Best Leader Reflections 59
Learning to lead 59
Learning from others 60
Experience 60
Teach someone else 60
Support of participants 61
Most important contributor 62
Organizational/Cultural Attributes of 63 Personal Best Effort
Planning structures and systems 64
Values or standards 65
Quotes and slogans 67
Getting the word out 67
How superintendents want to be remembered 68
Relationship Between District Size and Personal 69 Best Endeavor, Practice, and Strategies
Summary of Chapter 70
V
Page
CHAPTER V. SUMMARY, DISCUSSION, AND 72 RECOMMENDATIONS
Summary 72
Discussion 76
Recommendations for Further Research 81
BIBLIOGRAPHY 83
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 87
APPENDIX A. CONSENT FORM FOR SURVEY AND 88 CORRESPONDENCE
APPENDIX B. PERSONAL BEST SURVEY 92
APPENDIX C. CODING MAP, CODING FORM, AND 104 CODER WORKSHOP AGENDA
APPENDIX D. PERSONAL BEST QUOTES AND SLOGANS 115
1
ABSTRACT
The major purpose of this study was to identify and analyze the factors utilized by
superintendents in achieving their "personal best" in education. The data for this study
were gathered from fifty-two superintendents from California, Iowa, Missouri, and New
York during the months of December 1989 and January 1990. The superintendents each
filled out and returned a "Personal Best Survey" from which the data for the study were
gleaned.
Major findings of this study include:
(1) The most frequently used practices utilized by superintendents in achieving
their personal best effort were delineated. The most frequently used practice
reported by superintendents was to enable others to act.
(2) The background and situational factors of the personal best efforts were
identified and analyzed. The superintendents wrote regarding improving the
climate most frequently in their personal best effort.
(3) The superintendents' actions, regarding the success of their personal best
effort, were categorized into the appropriate strategy utilized.
(4) The superintendents were excited and fearful as they initiated their personal
best effort and they were self-satisfied during its implementation.
2
(5) Superintendents learned to lead from others, experience, and educational
training.
(6) The size of the district had no significant impact on how superintendents
identified and analyzed factors in achieving their personal best effort.
3
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION
In any organization, leaders are those who can bring people together to
accomplish the ordinary and the extraordinary. In the past several years, a number
of management experts have examined the qualities and characteristics of
leadership. They made an effort to detemriine what, makes an individual an effective
leader (Amundson, 1988). An excellent analysis of leadership is provided in a
series of papers written by John Gardner (1988), former Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare. Gardner identifies six special characteristics of leaders:
(a) think long term, (b) think in global trends, (c) emphasize values, (d) set
priorities, (e) communicate, and (f) think in terms of renewal.
, Most students of leadership agree that the ability to articulate a vision for an
organization Is a key responsibility of a leader. In Leaders (1985), it is suggested
that "an essential factor in leadership is the capacity to influence and organize
meaning for the members of the organization."
In public K-12 educational organization, the superintendent is the key person
responsible for providing leadership. The superintendent must have the vision as
to where the school must go, and act to help the organization and its members
change. We do not, however, know much about how these educational leaders
act to achieve this feat. While school reform has yielded reports and studies calling
for high levels of leadership, school administrators have little to help them know
how to lead. Much research has been written about the principal and leadership.
The key leadership position in a school district is the superintendent. We need to
4
know how the superintendent leads.
How does the superintendent move a school district forward? We do know
something about how their colleagues in the private sector lead. Bennis and
Nanus (1985), for example, conducted an in-depth analysis of ninety top leaders
in business and politics. Their research revealed the skills and strategies used by
ninety CEOs, purported to be among our country's most effective leaders. The
finding revealed the qualities that enabled them to take charge and lead. The study
clarified what those leaders did to use those skills and strategies and how they
acquired them. Four major strategies emerged from the research; four areas of
competency, four types of human handling skills, that all ninety of the leaders
embodied:
(a) Strategy 1: Attention through vision;
(b) Strategy 2: Meaning through communication;
(c) Strategy 3: Trust through positioning; and
(d) Strategy 4: Deployment of self through positive self-regard.
This is apparently what successful leaders do in the business world.
We can borrow from research in the private sector to learn more about
leadership and what superintendents do to institute change and exert leadership
in school systems. Kouzes and Posner (1988) examined what leaders did when
they achieved their "personal best" in a leadership role. A personal best experience
is an event or achievement in leadership which a leader believes to be his or her
"record-setting performance." Their research examined strategies business leaders
utilized when they achieved their individual standard of excellence. Every manager
5
in the study had at least one leadership story to tell. The stories they told seldom
sounded like textbook management. They were not logical cases of planning,
organizing, staffing, directing, and controlling. Instead, they were tales of dynamic
change and bold actions. The researchers asked what common practices leaders
used to get extraordinary things done in organizations.
From an examination of over five hundred surveys, the researchers identified
five practices (main categories of classifications) and ten commitments or strategies
the business leaders used to turn challenging opportunities into remarkable
successes. The practices were (a) challenging the process, (b) enabling others
to act, (c) inspiring a shared vision, (d) modeling the way, and (e) encouraging the
heart. Two of the strategies that the achieving leaders identified as important for
challenging the process were searching for opportunities and taking risks. Below
are the other four practices and an example of a common strategy for each
practice:
PRACTICE STRATEGY
Inspiring a Shared Vision Enlisting Others
Enabling Others to Act Strengthening Others
Modeling the Way Setting the Example
Encouraging the Heart Celebrating Accomplishments
The results of the study were striking, both in their refutation of the leader
stereotype and in their consistency. Kouzes and Posner found, as an illustration
of refutation of the leader stereotype, most successful ideas for competitive
innovation came not from the leaders, but from others, and the leaders gave away
6
their powers to others and became stronger. They found leaders exhibited certain
distinct practices when they did their best. They also found this behavior varied
little from industry to industry, and profession to profession. From the analysis of
the personal best cases, a model of leadership for guiding leaders in achieving
their highest level of excellence has been developed.
Statement of the Problem
Policymakers and experts continuously contend that the leadership of the
superintendent is important. The National Governors' Association report, Time for
Results: The Governors' 1991 Report on Education, stated that the "leadership of
superintendents will be a key ingredient in planning for the future." School leaders
are struggling to learn how to manage change and lead the organization to
excellence. There is a general lack of research to guide school leaders at the
district level. There is a need to conduct research that will clarify successful
practices and strategies used by effective superintendents.
Purposes of the Study
This study is designed to determine the commonality of leadership strategies
utilized by superintendent who achieve their personal best. The identification of
leadership strategies, secondary categories of classification, will help gain insight
into what superintendents do when achieving their personal best. The secondary
purpose is to determine if there are certain perceptions and feelings apparent in
the identified leadership practices of the superintendent. The identification of the
7
perceptions and feelings will be an effort to understand their Impact on the
decisions of the superintendents.
The third purpose is to gather anecdotal information that will further clarify
what superintendents do and how they do it when they achieve their personal best.
Survey questions will solicit anecdotal information, such as slogans, describing the
superintendent's vision of his or her personal best and elicit quotations on
leadership. Anecdotal information will help determine what they do, how it is done,
and in what situations these things work.
Research Questions
1. What are the background and situational factors involved when the
superintendent achieves his/her personal best?
2. What was the relative importance of the five identified practices in assisting
superintendents to achieve their personal best?
3. What strategies did superintendents utilize to carry out leadership practices?
4. V\ at are the feelings of superintendents during Initiation and Implementation
of their personal best endeavor?
5. Where or how did the superintendents learn the skills necessary to lead?
6. What is the relationship between the size of the school district and the
personal best endeavor, practice, and strategies?
8
Delimitation of the Study
The following factors limited the scope of the investigation:
1. The study utilized a small sample from four states.
2. A limitation implicit in this survey research was the inability of the
researcher to control the representative sample, which effects the ability to
generalize to the general population.
Definitions of Terms
These definitions are presented to give clarity to their use in this
investigation:
Anecdotal Information. A brief, subjective account of information supplied
by the superintendents to explain their personal best.
Arbitrator. One of the three members of the arbitration panel whose function
was to determine coding where disagreements existed between the two coders.
Coder. One of two who examined the fifty-two surveys and assigned
responses to categories using a coding map.
Coding Map. Assigned numbers relating to possible responses and
categories.
Intercoder Reliabil'rtv. As applied to educational measurements. Internal
consistency or stability of the measuring device over time (Borg and Gall, 1983).
The consistency of the two coders to categorize a response on the survey and
assign the same number from the coding map.
9
Leadership Practice. Leadership practice is the main category of
classification from the personal best survey. The practices, which are represented
by five fundamental areas, are those basic areas which enabled superintendents
to get extraordinary things done.
Leadership Strategy. A leadership strategy is a category of classification
which reflects a behavioral commitment in the personal best leadership survey.
Personal Best. A personal best experience is an event or achievement in
leadership in their school district, which a superintendent believes to be his/her
individual standard of excellence. It is that "record-setting performance" which
becomes the subject of their responses.
10
CHAPTER II. REVIEW OF LITERATURE
Introduction
This study investigated the common leadership strategies utilized by
superintendents who achieved their personal best, and examined types of factors
(perceptions and feelings) apparent in the strategies. This review was limited to
literature relevant to the study, addressing several subtopics related to leadership.
School Leader Functions and Tasks
Research has been conducted regarding the functions of the principal in an
effective or exemplary school. Kelly (1980) noted that the principal is most
responsible for the outcomes and satisfaction at the site and suggested functions
of the principal. Bird and Little (1986) identified strategies utilized by principals.
Cuban (1984) suggested no school can be effective without a highly functional
principal. He went on to suggest leadership tasks performed by effective
principals. Other researchers have identified effective principal behavior; Frasher
and Schoemaker (1982) and Sweeney (1982).
The superintendent has been the subject of limited research related to
behawors of an effective leader, in 1982, the American Association of School
Administrators (AASA) published Guidelines for the Preparation of School
Administrators. This publication initially identified a core set of superintendent
performance factors. The performance factors are as follows:
(a) Establish and maintain a positive and open learning environment.
(b) build strong support for education;
(c) develop and deliver an effective curriculum;
(d) develop and implement effective models/modes of instructional
delivery;
(e) create programs of continuous improvement;
(f) skillfully manage school system operations, and
(g) conduct and make use of significant research as a basis for problem
solving and program planning of all kinds.
Murphy and Hallinger (1986) identified twelve effective school districts in
California. Structured interviews were conducted with the superintendents of the
twelve districts and they identified six performance factors common to the
superintendent's role as leader. The performance factors were;
(a) setting goals and establishing expectations and standards;
(b) selecting staff;
(c) staff supervision/evaluation;
(d) establishing an instructional and curricular focus;
(e) monitoring curriculum and instruction, and
(f) insuring consistency in technical core operations.
Collier (1987) used self-reports of superintendents in Texas to determine
those factors necessary for successful superintendent job performance.
Superintendents were asked to rank the most Important superintendent
performance factors related to school district effectiveness. The most important
factors reported by superintendents were:
12
(a) demonstrates a broad array of leadership skills;
(b) demonstrates sound principles of personnel administration;
(c) employs sound financial planning and cash flow management;
(d) employs principles of sound curriculum design and instructional
delivery;
(e) employs effective school/community public relations, coalition
building, and related factors;
(f) ensures that instructional time and resources are used effectively:
(g) develops valid and reliable performance measures for instructional
outcomes, and
(h) provides for effective evaluation of teacher performance.
Sclafani (1987) surveyed a national sample of superintendents to identify the
most important superintendent performance factors. The superintendents reported
the most important factors were:
(a) demonstrates a broad array of leadership skills;
(b) demonstrates sound principles of personnel administration;
(c) employs sound financial planning and cash flow management;
(d) employs effective school/community public relations, coalition
building, and related factors;
(e) provides for effective evaluation of teacher performance;
(0 uses cost-effective techniques and sound program budgeting;
(g) utilizes motivation techniques, and
13
(h) demonstrates conflict mediation and the skills to accept and cope
with controversy.
Beyond Tasks, Functions, And Skills
Research has identified important functions and tasks of the superintendent.
Much has been written regarding the performance factors necessary for successful
superintendent job effectiveness (Sclafani, 1987). Kouzes and Posner (1988)
recognized the need for a change, for a more in-depth examination of leadership.
They stated:
"More than ever, there is a need for our leaders to guide us to greatness. Yet there seems to be a reluctance to answer the cry for leadership. Why? We believe this cautiousness results not from a lack of courage or competence, but from outdated notions about leadership. Just about everting we have been taught about traditional management prevents us from being effective leaders. We need to go beyond the traditions, the functions, and the tasks." (preface, p.XV)
Research conducted by the California Advanced Academy for Executive
Leaders (1990) suggests that for schools to matter, and for superintendents to
matter within these schools, the superintendents and their systems must change
their basic views of leadership. This change must occur to achieve fundamentally
expanded and different views of learning and excellence. The following themes
emerged from the Academy's research providing suggested direction as to how
superintendents must think and behave if schools and their leaders are to achieve
fundamentally different views of learning and excellence:
Project passion and purpose. Significant instiuctional change will not occur
unless the superintendent takes strong, passionate leadership and focuses on
14
instruction. The superintendent needs to have a hunger for high purpose and a
passion to achieve it.
Hçht for the freedom of the fob. Just as we empower others In the
educational system to do their best, we must strongly argue for the freedom within
the system to achieve all the things the public demands of us, and which we
demand of ourselves.
Recapture the focus. Superintendents must focus on that which they were
trained to do, promote student learning. The superintendent needs to be an
instructional leader who facilitates, rewards, and spurs the instructional
achievement of others.
Coordinating child-focused services. Superintendents in the '90s will play
a role in bringing about the effective coordination of these services with the
instructional programs in schools.
Redefine accountabilitv svstems. Redefining accountability systems in
schools will increase individual responsibility for outcomes at all levels and will
focus the efforts of all school personnel on the importance of student achievement,
not on standardized processes.
Enhance personnel management. The superintendents of the '90s will be
learners, explorers, and proponents of an improvement ethic which establishes the
expectation that everyone in the organization should be learning and committed to
improvement.
Establish reward svstem. There is a need to devise programs and
techniques for providing and expanding rewards that directly relate to performance.
15
Be healthy people. Professional performance and personal well-being will
be linked in effective school executives.
Private Sector
Research in the private sector has gone beyond tasks and functions.
Bennis and Nanus (1985) conducted an in-depth analysis of ninety top leaders -
executives at companies like GM, ARCO, and Lever Brothers. Bennis and Nanus
stated: "If there was ever a moment in history when a comprehensive, strategic
view of leadership was needed, this is certainly it."(p.4) Leaders (Bennis and
Nanus, 1985) was written in the belief that leadership is the pivotal force behind
successful organizations and that to create vital and viable organizations,
leadership is necessary to create a vision and mobilize the organization. Their
study revealed what the ninety business leaders did to utilize leadership skills and
strategies and how they acquired them.
Their research revealed that four major strategies developed which were
embodied by all ninety of the leaders: (a) attention through vision, (b) meaning
through communication, (c) trust through positioning, and (d) the development of
self through positive self-reg?rd. Bennis and Nanus found "that leadership is the
marshalling of skills possessed by a majority, but used by a minority. But it's
something that can be learned by anyone, taught to everyone, denied to no one."
fLeadersl. The four strategies, according to Bennis and Nanus, can be learned,
developed, and improved upon.
16
Attention through Vision. This strategy is the management of attention
through vision which creates focus. All ninety people interviewed by the
researchers had a picture of what the organization was about. Their visions were
compelling and pulled people forward.
Meaning through Communication. This strategy creates meaning for people
by talking and listening. A group becomes aligned with the goals of an
organization. Meaning through communication is the process for getting the
message across at every level of the organization.
Trust through Positioning. This strategy is the lubrication that makes it
possible for organizations to work. Trust implies accountability, predictability, and
reliability. Trust is the glue that maintains organizational integrity. Positioning is the
set of actions necessary to implement the vision of the leader. Through
positioning, a leader establishes trust.
The Deployment of Self through Positive Self-Regard. This strategy is the
interpersonal and human aspect of leadership. It consists of three major
components: (a) knowledge of one's strengths, (b) the capacity to nurture and
develop those strengths, and (c) the ability to discern the fit between one's
strengths and weaknesses and the organization's needs. Positive self-regard
exerts force by creating in others a sense of confidence and high expectations.
Positive self-regard is the creative deployment of self while leading.
Individuals who possess this strategy are good at their jobs, enjoy their
work, and are proud of what they do because it reflects their value system.
17
A m^or study has prowded insight into leadership. Kouzes and Posner
(1988) examined what leaders did when achieving their personal best. The authors
asked leaders what they did when they got extraordinary things done in
organizations. They researched the practices leaders use to turn challenging
opportunities into remarkable successes. The researchers challenged myths and
tradition regarding leadership. TTieir findings contain a set of practices that can
form the foundation for the development of a new generation of leaders. They
compared traditional thoughts regarding leadership with their data. Their research
revealed the following:
Traditional management teaching would have us believe that the ideal organization is orderly and stable. Yet, when successful leaders talk about their personal best achievements, they talk about challenging the process, about changing things, about shaking up the organization." (preface, p. XVI).
"Leadership myth portrays the leader as a renegade who magnetizes a band of followers with courageous acts, in fact, leaders attract followers not because of their willful defiance, but because of their deep respect for the aspirations of others." (preface, p. XVI).
Traditional management teaches us that leaders ought to be cool, aloof, and analytical - separating emotion from work. Yet when leaders discuss the things they are the proudest of in their own careers, they describe feelings of inspiration, passion, intensity, challenge, caring, and even love." (preface, p. XVI).
The authors examined the experiences of five hundred middle and senior-
level managers when they achieved their personal best. They examined what
leaders did when they did their personal best at leading, not managing, others.
These were experiences when, in their own perception, these leaders set their own
individual standard of excellence. The personal best survey consisted of 38 open-
ended questions. Sample questions included were: (a) Who initiated the project?,
18
(b) How did you prepare for this experience?, and (c) What special techniques and
strategies did you use to get other people Involved In the project? More than 500
of these surveys were collected.
Every manager in the study had at least one leadership story to tell. The
stories they told seldom sounded like textbook management. They were not
logical cases of planning, organizing, staffing, directing, and controlling. Instead,
they were tales of dynamic change and bold actions. The research revealed that
leadership involves five basic practices and ten specific behaviors:
1. Challenging the Process, practice number one, is the opportunity for
greatness. The researchers found that leadership is an active, not a passive,
process. While many leaders attributed their success to "luck" or "being in the right
place at the right time," none of them sat idly by or waited for fate to smile upon
them. Although the distinctive competencies of a person may fit the needs of the
moment, those who lead others to greatness seek challenge. All the cases
collected about leadership personal bests involved some form of challenge. The
challenge may have been an innovative new product, a reorganization, or a
turnaround; but the majority of cases involved a change from the status quo which
challenged the process. Kouzes and Posner found leaders exhibit two primary
behaviors in this practice category:
(a) Searching for Opportunities: when leaders look for ways to alter the
status quo, to create something totally new, for new processes, for ways to
beat the system. Leaders tend to search for opportunities to do what has
never been done.
19
(b) Experiment and Take Risks: a leader explores sources of innovation,
turns mistakes into learning opportunities, and will try untested approaches.
2. The second practice. Inspiring a Shared Vision, is that ability of
leaders to lock forward to the future and inspire others to agree and work together
to achieve a common vision. Leaders spend considerable effort gazing across the
horizon of time, imagining what it would be like when they arrive at their final
destinations. Leaders get others to buy into their dreams by showing how all will
be served by a common purpose. Some call it vision; others describe it as a
purpose, mission, goal, even personal agenda. Regardless of what it is called, it
is the desire to make something happen, to change the way things are, to create
something that no one else has ever created before. The behaviors are:
(a) Envisioning the Future: to imagine, to see into the future, and to stay
focused on what to create for the organization.
(b) Enlist Others: to communicate the shared vision with commitment and
feeling.
3. Enabling Others to Act, the third practice, is the art of developing
teams with spirit and cohesion who will work together. Exemplary leaders enlist
the support and assistance of those who must make the project work. They
involve, in some way, those who must live with the results, and they make it
possible for others to do good work. They encourage collaboration, build teams,
and empower others. They enable otiiers to act. The two key behaviors for
enabling them to act are:
20
(a) Fosterinç Collaboration: ability to have people work together for the
good of the organization.
(b) Strengthening Others: empowers the members of the organization to
take responsibility through sharing power and information.
4. The fourth practice, Modeling the Way, is the process for the leader to
show the way. Leaders stand up for their beliefs. They practice what they preach.
They show others by their example that they live by the values they profess. The
behaviors related to this practice are:
(a) Setting the Example: leading by doing. It is the understanding of how
leaders model the way through the clarity and courage of their convictions.
(b) Planning Small Wins: builds commitment to action. It is the realization
tiiat the most effective change processes are incremental.
5. Encouraging the Heart, the fifth practice, is recognizing that getting
extraordinary things done in organizations is hard work. Leaders encourage others
to continue the quest. They inspire others with courage and hope. The two
behaviors are:
(a) Recognizing Individual Contributions: leaders treat people in a way tiiat
leads to extraordinary achievements. Leaders know people repeat behavior
that is rewarded.
(b) Celebrating Accomplishments: valuing the victory and cheering about
key values is a key behavior. Celebrations are central to the core of tine
culture of an organization.
21
The Kouzner's and Posner's study (1985) is about leading people, not
merely managing them. The authors wrote of leadership beginning where
management ends, where the systems of rewards and punishments, control, and
scrutiny, give way to innovation, individual character, and the courage of
convictions.
The results of Kouzes' and Posner's study were striking both in their
refutation of the leader stereotype and in their consistency. From the analysis of
the personal best cases, a model of leadership which guides leaders when
achieving their highest level of excellence when leading, was developed.
Summary of the Chapter
The review of literature focused on educational leadership functions, tasks,
and leadership research in the business sector. The literature indicates that much
is known about how school leaders function, but superintendents have no guide
as to how to lead.
The review clarified that research has been conducted to identify effective
schools and what is expected for superintendent success. It also provided self-
report data indicating what superintendents see as important for success. AASA,
(1982); Murphy and Hallinger, (1986); Sclafani, (1987); and Collier, (1987), all
conducted research related to the superintendent and performance factors related
to effective leadership. The review of literature then turned to two important
leadership studies in the private realm. Bennis and Nanus (1985) conducted
research which revealed how ninety business leaders utilized leadership skills and
22
strategies in four major areas. Finally, research by Kouzes and Posner (1988) was
reviewed. They examined what practices and strategies business leaders used to
get extraordinary things done in their organizations.
The present study identifies and analyzes factors utilized by superintendents
when achieving their personal best in education. The practices and strategies
superintendents used to get extraordinary things done will be identified and
analyzed.
23
CHAPTER III. METHODS AND PROCEDURES
Hie purpose of this chapter is to discuss the methods and procedures used
in identifying and analyzing the practices utilized by superintendents in achieving
their personal best in education.
Survey Construction
The data to identify the leadership practices utilized by superintendents were
obtained by using the survey "Recalling A Personal Best Leadership Experience."
This survey was developed by the researcher using the original instrument
administered to over five hundred leaders in business developed by Dr. James M.
Kouzes and Dr. Barry 2. Posner. Slight modifications were made to gain the
necessary data. This researcher communicated with Dr. Posner at Santa Clara
University in writing and on the telephone to obtain both permission to use and to
seek input regarding changes.
The superintendents in the sample all responded to the same survey. The
instructions for completing the instrument asked the respondents to focus their
thinking on the leadership experiences as a superintendent, select their personal
best, spend time getting a clear mental picture of the experience, recall and review
the activities, and answer all survey questions. The questions required narrative
responses and provided an opportunity for anecdotal comments.
In December 1989, this researcher administered the personal best survey
to four "volunteer superintendents" to determine the time span for answering the
questions. Because of this field test, several refinements and clarifications were
24
made in the introduction, instructions, and wording of items to reduce the average
completion time to forty-five minutes.
Sample Selection and Collection of Data
Subjects who participated in the study were from California, Missouri, Iowa,
and New York. The process to determine which superintendents would receive a
survey was to contact the County Superintendents of Riverside, San Bernardino,
and Orange Counties. They supplied a list of superintendents from their county
(Riverside - 27, San Bernardino - 33, and Orange -10). State level administrators
were contacted in Iowa, Missouri, and New York, and asked to supply the names
of ten superintendents. The survey was mailed to one hundred superintendents
in late December of 1989 and early January of 1990. Each packet contained a
letter of introduction and instructions, a survey, and a stamped, self-addressed
manila envelope for mailing purposes. Two weeks after mailing the packets, post
cards were mailed to subjects who had not returned the instrument. Two weeks
later (last week of January 1990) phone calls were made to subjects who had not
responded. By February 20, 1990, fifty-two superintendents had returned
completed personal best surveys to the researcher. This represents a 52% return
rate.
A coding map was formulated after receiving approximately seventy-five
percent of the surveys from the superintendents. The researcher developed
discrete categories for each question after reading each survey item, formulating
potential answers, and examining superintendents' responses. It was also
necessary to devise a coding system to further clarify responses that reflected
25
strategies. For example, the superintendents were asked, "How did your team
celebrate its accomplishments, its milestone achievements?" Other categories,
involving the superintendents' feelings, were also involved in the coding system
development. For example, "Please write down a few words which describe how
you felt personally as the leader of this experience." Dr. Posner was contacted for
copies of his coding map, but he indicated none was used in writing their research.
After the researcher formulated the categories for each question, the coding
map was sent to an expert panel composed of Dr. Richard Manatt, Dr. Daniel
Reschly, and Dr. James Sweeney, all of Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, as well
as Dr. Posner of Santa Clara University. The professors on this expert panel
offered suggestions for changes in the categories.
Concurrent with the administration of the surveys, the researcher identified
two individuals to analyze and code the responses. One coder was an Iowa State
University graduate student and the second coder was an elementary computer
teacher from the Banning Unified School District, Banning, California. The two
coders received two days of training on March 2 and 3, 1990, In Banning,
California. Three weeks prior to the training the coders were given a copy of The
Leadership Challenge by Kouzes and Posner. TTiey were responsible for reading
the book as part of the preparation for the training session. They were also asked
to complete the survey just as superintendents had done so as to review and
clarify questions and categories. This also allowed the coders to gain an
appreciation of the thought process utilized and specific questions asked. The
26
coders were also given a copy of the coding map to become familiar with the
categories as they related to specific questions.
During the first day of the training session, March 2,1990, the coders met
for five hours. The session consisted of an overview of the workshop, objectives,
a definition of terms, and timelines for completion and entry of the coding data. A
completed survey was discussed and the coders worked together to review and
clarify coding map categories, so a mutual understanding and answer range
variation could be understood. This process was repeated on two more surveys.
To further increase the intercoder reliability, the coders next analyzed three surveys
on an individual basis and then shared their coding answers response with each
other. This was followed by discussion and the trainer providing additional
category classification Information for the coders.
During the second day of training, six hours, the analyses of responses
continued, codings were compared, and areas of discrepancies discussed. As a
result of these sessions, where the other category had an excessive number of
responses, specific coding map changes were made to allow for a definitive
answer. More meaningful data could be obtained utilizing these categories.
Changes were made in four of the seventy-one question categories by the coders
and trainer. A coder workshop agenda is in the appendix.
The training session was designed to establish intercoder reliability at the .80
level or above. After five surveys, the intercoder reliability was .78. The intercoder
reliability for the fifty-two surveys was .90. The intercoder reliability was obtained
27
by dividing the total number of disagreements of the coders in the predetermined
sample by the total number of answers in the predetermined sample.
After the training session on March 2 and 3,1990, the coder was given the
remaining copies of the fifty-two completed surveys to code. They were asked to
return the coded material within thirty days. The coded data were returned to the
researcher on April 1 and April 2,1990, by the two coders.
Upon receipt of the coding sheets, the researcher identified specific items
which were coded differently by each coder. There was an average of seven of the
possible 76 responses. A panel, consisting of three Banning Unified School District
teachers, met during the first week of May to determine the categories where
differences existed. The panel had a one-hour orientation to acquaint themselves
with the study, instrument, and process for identifying the conflict responses. The
panel read the question for each disputed answer, then discussed and voted on
each. A majority vote determined the category for placement.
Upon completion by the panel, the original coding sheets were changed to
reflect the panel's decision. The coded information was entered into the computer
during the latter two weeks of May 1990.
28
CHAPTER IV. FINDINGS
Introduction
The purpose of this chapter is to present the results of the investigation
designed to Identify and analyze the practices, feelings, and strategies of
superintendents in achieving their personal best as educational leaders.
Six research questions guided the study: (a) What are the background and
situational factors involved when the superintendent achieves his/her personal
best?, (b) What is the relative importance of five leadership practices identified by
business leaders as important in achieving their personal best?, (c) What strategies
did superintendents utilize to carry out leadership practices?, (d) What are the
feelings of superintendents during initiation and implementation of their personal
best endeavor?, (e) Where or how did the superintendents learn the skills
necessary to lead?, and (f) What is the relationship between the size of the school
district and the personal best endeavor, practice, and strategies?
Background and Situational Features of the
Personal Best
Leadership is highly idiosyncratic. It is important to understand the
background and situational features surrounding superintendents who achieve
their personal best. The typical respondent had been a superintendent for eight
years in a district of 6400 students. This district size mean was somewhat inflated
because some Southern California superintendents from larger districts responded
29
to the survey. These included San Diego (119,500) and San Bernardino (30,000).
The largest district had 119,500 students and the smallest district had 300 students.
The median size of the districts was 4800. Many of the personal bests described
occurred between 1981 and 1990; of the superintendents who identified the date
of their personal best, 64 percent chose a personal best that took place in the last
10 years. Forty-five of the fifty-two personal bests took place where the
superintendent is currently employed.
Figure 1 shows the district size of the respondents. Twenty-seven
superintendents were from districts of 5,000 students or less. Eight of these were
from districts of fewer than 1,000 students. Fifteen of the superintendents are
leaders of districts of 5,000 - 15,000 in student population. The remaining ten
superintendents were from districts of more than 15,000 students and two of those
were from districts of 25,000 or more students.
25000 & Up H
5 15000-25000 B -Iw 5 5000-15000 ji I -R f 20o^5oooi
o % 1000-2000 K
a lOOO&Less
0 2 4 4 6 8 10 12 Number of Superintendents
14 16
Figure 1
Number of Superintendents and School District Size
30
Subject of "Personal Best"
Each superintendent in the study had at least one leadership story to tell.
These stories seldom sounded like those in the leadership textbooks and were not
about planning, organizing, staffing, directing, controlling, and other classic
management tasks. They represent stories of dynamic change and bold actions.
The superintendents' personal best reflected a significant change.
Regardless of district size, experience, or the geographic region of the country,
their personal bests were about firsts, about departure from educational norms,
about things that had not been done before. This includes planning for rapid
student population growth, negotiation innovations, and projects to improve
climate. This is best illustrated by the personal best of Superintendent Tom
Payzant of San Diego, California, "A Historic Collective Bargaining Agreement."
Tom Payzant had been frustrated for twenty years by the time and energy
consumed in "an adversarial process." He put his reputation and credibility on the
line to initiate an alternative collective bargaining process which led to an
unprecedented four-year contract with the certificated and classified personnel of
the San Diego School District. Payzant took risks in seizing the opportunity to
make a major change. He broke down stereotypes and traditions to implement this
major change. He viewed this innovation and settlement as his most significant
accomplishment as a superintendent.
Table 1 shows the specific categories in which superintendents achieved
their personal best. Twenty-five percent of the fifty-two responding superintendents
selected Improving Climate as their personal best. The second most popular
31
selected Improving Climate as their personal best. The second most popular
subject of leadership revolved around Growth and Expansion in their school
districts. Other personal best efforts included effective schools, curriculum
improvement, school closings, planning, and negotiations.
Table 1
Frequencies and Percentages of Personal Best Efforts
Personal Best Frequency Per Cent
Improving Climate 13 25%
District Growth & Expansion 11 21 %
Effective Schools Project 6 12%
Curriculum Improvement 6 12%
School Closing 5 10%
District Planning 4 7%
Collective Bargaining 4 7%
Other 3 6%
TOTAL 52 100%
32
Reason for Selection of Subject of Personal Best Effort
The respondents were asked why they selected a specific category or
project that became their personal best. Forty percent of the superintendents
selected their project because they felt it would make a difference. Twenty-five
percent indicated that self-satisfaction was their reason for selecting the project.
Another 18 percent reported their effort was good for Mds and thus, their reason
for selection. The remaining 17 percent were varied.
Length of Personal Best Effort
There was considerable variance in the length of time the superintendents
took to accomplish their personal best. Figure 2 showed that thirty-one percent
of the personal bests were completed in a time span ranging from a few weeks to
nine months. Twenty percent took one year, 20% took two years, and 10% of the
superintendents took more than two years to accomplish their personal best. One
personal best involved changing fourteen K-8 schools in Vista, California, to a Year-
Round Education calendar; and is ongoing after one-and-one-half years. On the
other hand, a project in Pauma Valley, California, took only two weeks from start
to finish. For those two weeks, union representatives and the administration
negotiated and settled the master contract using a "win/win" philosophic premise.
33
Ov8r2 Years
mm### W wf!miu!!Wf.
liiniillli. 7-9 Months
mmwrnm# % 44 Months
" 1-3 Months K
No Answer
8 10 12 14 16 18 20 Per Cent of Superintendents
Figure 2. Length of Time to Complete Personal Best.
Most Important Contributor to PrQject's Success
Superintendents were asked what they felt was the most important
contributor to the project's success. Table 2 shows what contributed to the
personal best effort success. Involvement of others emerged as the most
significant confributor in the success of their personal best effort; 33 percent of the
superintendents Indicated this was the top contributor. Sixteen percent of the
superintendents responding to the survey indicated they took risks to challenge the
status quo. Another sixteen percent reported envisioned the future. Other
important contributors to the success of the personal best effort included modeling,
communication, and the development of trust and respect.
34
Table 2
Frequencies and Percents of Contributors to Personal Best Effort Success.
Contributors Frequencies Percent
Involved Others 17 33 %
Took Risks 8 16 %
Envisioned 8 16 %
Modeled 5 9 %
Communicated 5 9 %
Developed Trust & Respect 4 8 %
Other 5 9 %
TOTAL 52 100 %
Perceptions and Feelings During
Initiation, Implementation and Completion
A personal best effort may provide leaders great challenges and stimulate
much anxiety, it seems likely it would be helpful to other leaders if they could
understand the perceptions and feelings of superintendents during the initiation and
implementation of personal best projects. The superintendents, during initiation of
35
the project, felt excitement and fear. The search for opportunities beyond their
previous experience was very exciting to them. The creativity, the thought of the
unknown, the untested approaches, lent to that excitement. The element of fear
also crept into their psyche. Superintendents indicated they asked themselves
questions such as, "What if the personal best project does not succeed? "What
if the level of cooperation necessary for success does not occur?" The
superintendents were, at times, frustrated over the lack of support. The
superintendent from Capistrano, California, typified these feelings. He succeeded
in his personal best to adopt a broad-based program of sex education. He
overcame an aggressive and well-planned opposition campaign mounted by
religious fundamentalists. The superintendent was creative in his approach and
organization. He reported, "1 am excited over the process of acceptance with
opposition." At the same time the element of fear was present. Fear for his job,
if things did not go well. An accumulation and conglomeration of feelings were
apparent.
During implementation, the superintendents felt self-satisfaction,
togetherness, excitement, and power. Table 3 shows the feelings during initial
implementation. Fifty-four percent of the superintendents reported feeling a great
sense of self-satisfaction during implementation and upon completion of their
personal best effort They said this self-satisfaction was a reflection of an increased
feeling of self worth, as the personal best effort progressed from implementation
to completion. The superintendents talked about what the team members had in
common, how they came to understand each other's needs, and how the
36
togetherness developed as they worked on their personal best. The feeling of
excitement expressed by superintendents during the initiation phase of the
personal best remained during the implementation. Eighteen percent indicated
they had a feeling of excitement as the personal best effort progressed. Six
percent reported a feeling of power during implementation.
Table 3
Feelings Expressed in Percent of Superintendents During Initiation and
Implementation of Personal Best Effort
Initiation Implementation
Excitement
Fear
Frustration
Happiness
Other
39%
37%
10%
6%
8%
Self-Satisfaction 54%
Togetherness 20%
Excitement 18%
Power 6%
Other 2%
Common Leadership Practices and Strategies
of Superintendents
Five practices identified by Kouzes and Posner (1988) described what CEOs
do to achieve their personal best. These practices were (a) enabling others to act,
37
(b) inspiring a shared vision, (c) modeling the way, (d) encouraging the heart, and
(e) challenging the process. TTie personal best survey used in this study utilized
these five basic practices and focused on the top two strategies for each practice
that enabled superintendents to get extraordinary things done. To determine
which practice superintendents used most frequently, questions were asked
regarding the five to seven key leadership actions they took to accomplish their
personal best leadership effort. Those responses from superintendents were then
forced into Kouzes* and Posner's "practice categories."
The frequencies of the key action answers were tallied to reflect the
importance of the "Common Leadership Practices ' utilized by superintendents in
accomplishing their personal best. Table 4 shows the rank and points of the
practices. The point totals were obtained by adding the five allowed responses for
each of the fifty-two superintendents for this survey question. This amounted to
a total point accumulation of 260.
Research, from Kouzes and Posner (1988), yielded two strategies that were
used to achieve each of the practices. In this study, the superintendents were
asked if they indeed used both of the strategies in each practice. They did. The
superintendents were also asked to indicate how they went about utilizing the
strategies. For example, in the practice of enabling others to act, they indicated
they utilized the strategies of fostering collaboration and strengthening others.
They then told how the two strategies were used in achieving their personal best.
38
Table 4
Practice. Ranks, and Strategies Utilized in Superintendents Personal Best Effort
PRACTICE RANK POINTS STRATEGY
1. Enabled Others to Act 1 96 (1) Fostered Collaboration (2) Strengthened Others
II. Inspired a Shared Vision 2 63 0) Envisioned the Future II. Inspired a Shared Vision (2) Enlisted Others
III. Modeled the Way 3 54 (1) Set the Example (2) Planned Small Wins
IV. Encouraged the Heart 4 33 (1) Recognized Contributions (2) Celebrated Accomplishments
V. Challenged the Process 5 14 (1) Searched for Opportunities (2) Experimented and Took Risks
Each practice will be discussed in an effort to clarify meaning or describe
how each helped the superintendent achieve his or her personal best. Strategies
will also be discussed to shed further light on how the practice was accomplished.
The two strategies most frequently used to accomplish the practice will be
discussed in greater depth.
Enabled Others to Act.
The superintendents said they did not, as leaders, achieve success by
themselves. They enabled others to act by enlisting support and assistance and
by involving, in some way, those who must live with the results. Involvement
enabled them to do good work. Enabling others to act was the most frequently
used practice that superintendents utilized to achieve their personal best. Sixty-
39
used practice that superintendents utilized to achieve their personal best. Sixty-
one percent of the superintendents reported that enabling others to act was the
single greatest contributor to the success of their project.
Jacquelin Spacek, Superintendent of Lakeside Union School District,
Lakeside, California, summarized it nicely:
"Enabling others to act was the very key to our effort to implement site-based management. We trained in group process and solicited feedback to gain collective decisions. We enabled our teachers and administrators. We developed trust through others in a safe environment, our team, to assist in gaining input. This environment enabled others to be participants in the decision-making process."
Ron Revelle of Highland, New York, also characterized how these others
were enabled to act. He stated:
The team members were made to feel they were critical to the success of the vision. Key information was shared with team members, as well as opening up the lines of communication with myself and others involved with the process, we enlisted their support."
This was similar to those other examples provided by other superintendents.
Enabling went beyond the immediate decision-making group. The superintendents
enlisted the support of board members, teachers, parents, peers, and community
members.
How do superintendents enable others?
The two strategies which emerged as the most significant by
superintendents who enabled others were; (a) fostered collaboration, and (b)
strengthened others.
Fostered Collaboration. Superintendents enabled others to act by fostering
collaboration; building teams to achieve success. The data showed this strategy
40
was about getting people to work together. Superintendents recognized they
needed others to accomplish their personal best. They involved teachers, parents,
peers, students, and school board members and built spirited and cohesive teams.
They involved others in planning, listened, solicited input, and gave members of the
team discretion to make their own decisions.
In the fifty-two cases we studied, not a single example of extraordinary
achievement was encountered that was accomplished without the active effort and
support of many people. Many superintendents like Donald Lindstrom reported,
"We did it together." He fostered collaboration.
In a collaborative effort, everyone is important to the success of the
personal best effort. Table 5 shows when asked, "Who else was involved with the
success of the personal best?", 45 percent of the superintendents reported they
involved all pertinent and related Input groups in their success (parents, teachers,
board, and administrators). Fourteen percent said they Involved the board and
administrators in their success, while 10 percent said they involved principals and
teachers. The remaining 31 percent reported varied combinations of their
constituency were involved; peers, board, and teachers, and board and parents.
This Involvement, coupled with assistance in learning how to work together,
fostered collaboration which enabled others to act together.
41
Table 5
Those Involved with the Success of the Personal Best Effort.
All (Parents, Teachers, Board, & Administrators) 45%
Board & Administrators 14%
Principals and Teachers 10%
Board 4%
Board & Teachers 4%
Board & Parents 4%
Peers 4%
Other 15%
Eighty-eight percent said they did use specific approaches to foster collaboration.
Figure 3 shows the approaches used by superintendents to build teamwork or
collaboration.
Ron Hockwalt, El Cajon, California, used the approach of building teamwork
with a small group and slowly expanded the circle to foster collaboration. He
pointed out the essential strand of building that "Reeling" with the team in stages.
Hockwalt reported that as he fostered teamwork he sought to change people's
thinking from an either/or thought process to a positive perspective on working
together. Making it clear that being willing to reciprocate would encourage people
to recognize that the greatest gain comes from teamwork. Sixty-two percent
reported that building teamwork was the primary approach for fostering
42
collaboration. One superintendent put it nicely:
"Leadership is a relationship between leaders and the people they aspire to lead. A feilure to understand that leadership is a shared responsibility, such as not building teamwork, is a leadership destined for mediocrity. Not Involving others will not allow the achievement of excellence in one's personal best."
In utilizing teamwork to foster collaboration, a California superintendent
assigned tasks that required the teachers to exchange ideas and resources. As
the teachers jointly worked together, they saw the need to share information and
became convinced that everyone should contribute to the effort of the group.
They built a team.
Twelve percent of the superintendents reported they fostered collaboration
by developing cooperative goals. Developing cooperative goals through staff
planning produced a model program for a superintendent in Santa Clarita,
California. In his view, cooperative goals ensured that people worked together to
ensure each other's success. When people understood their goals were workable
and compatible, they then promoted their own welfare by promoting the group
interest
NoAnawer 10%
Buiid Trust flaiationshjps
0
BuiM Teamwtxk El 0 10 20 30 40 50 60
PefCerrt 70
Roure 3. Approaches Utilized to Foster Collaboration.
43
Trusting relationships (eight percent) were critical for fostering collaboration,
"We were absolutely honest and forthright from the start - no hidden agenda, we
cooperated and supported each other," responded Michael Stuckhardt, Pauma
Valley, California. He learned that developing support, involving others, and
delegating generated a high level of trust. This approach allowed him to initiate
and implement "Win/Win Negotiations" with the certificated staff of his district.
Trust, in his view, was "that all important glue holding the effort together." Trust
was also developed by meeting commitments and keeping promises.
Superintendents reported their behavior was more critical than that of any other
person in elevating the level of trust in their district. Listening and showing interest
were also important. Superintendents also reported they listened to and showed
interest in ideas and thoughts which created a positive climate and tended to
develop trust.
Strengthened Others. Strengthening others enables them to play a role in
shaping their team's success. The frequencies and percents of techniques utilized
by superintendents to strengthen others are shown in Table 5. Thirty-one percent
of the superintendents indicated they strengthened others through empowerment,
providing an opportunity for team members to act and make decisions. This
strengthened them and aided the personal best efforts. They also noted that
people were strengthened when they work on tasks critical to the efforts' success
and when their accomplishments are recognized as important.
More than one of four superintendents indicated they strengthened others
44
through involving them in working on cooperative goals. In one superintendent's
words,
"I believe in the ability of our team and they have much to offer to the district through working on cooperative goals. Teamwork strengthens others and helps develop the commitment and skills of those involved."
Fifteen percent said they strengthened others by developing an
understanding of each other's needs. One superintendent reported he broke
down barriers and set about developing an understanding by encouraging
interactions among the team members. Other superintendents said weekly
meetings with team members helped the members come to understand each
other's needs, which in turn strengthened the individuals and the group. Other
techniques utilized by superintendents to strengthen others were to help them feel
united as a team (11%) and discuss expected behavior with individuals and groups.
45
Table 5
Frequencies and Percents of Techniques Utilized bv Superintendents to Strengthen
Others-
Technique Frequencies Percent
Empowerment 16 31%
Work on Cooperative Goals 14 27%
Develop Understanding of 8 15%
Each Other's Needs
Feel United as a Team 6 11%
Discussed Expected Behavior 4 8%
Other 4 8%
TOTAL 52 100%
inspiring A Shared Vision.
Inspiring a shared vision was the second most frequently used practice
utilized by the superintendents. The superintendents were futurists to some
extent. They had a vision and ideals of what could be. They communicated their
hopes and dreams so others clearly understood and accepted their vision as their
46
own. Rene Townsend, Superintendent of Vista Unified, Vista, California, wrote,
"Leaders have to have a dream, a vision they care about passionately enough to persevere in the toughest of times. With strong appeals and quiet persuasion, they develop enthusiastic supporters."
Patricia Novotney of Temecula, California, stressed the importance of a
shared vision, "I spent a great deal of time with community and school district
leaders sharing our ideas. We talked of the ideal, we discussed the future, we
shared our vision." Two strategies were instrumental in inspiring a shared vision.
They are: (a) envisioned the future, and (b) enlisted others.
Envisioned the Future. Bennis and Nanus (1985) listed vision as one of
their four strategies employed by CEOs who take charge. Vision, according to
Bennis and Nanus, grabs. Management of attention through vision creates focus.
Vision animates and transforms purpose into action. Kouzes and Posner (1988)
define a vision as an ideal and unique image of the future. Both sets of authors
depict vision as a vehicle which leaders use to change ideas and images to
organizational action.
Superintendents who achieve their personal best looked to the future. They
had a vision and ideals that drove how excellence could be achieved. Larry Maw,
Lake Elsinore, California, described how vision made a difference in his
negotiations project, *1 wsualized a settlement with both unions and a setting of the
stage for another settlement for the upcoming year we settled the next time in
two days!" Maw "saw something out there," and imagined that extraordinary
outcomes could be realized in the future for the district, if the proper negotiations
stage could be set. This was one of the many similar examples illustrating the
47
importance of vision. Many superintendents reported tiiey needed to be forward
looking and have a clear sense of direction to achieve their personal best.
Figure 4 depicts how the superintendents envisioned the future to achieve
their personal best.
Other
For ttw Good of Stixients
Complets Project
10 20 30 40 Percent
50 60
Figure 4. How Superintendents Envisioned the Future To Achieve Their Personal
Best.
Forty-five percent of the respondents' vision of the future included setting
a new standard of excellence. When Larry Maw visualized the settlement of his
negotiations project, he wanted to set the stage for achieving a level of excellence
yet achieved by the district. A new standard of excellence meant the establishment
of the most positive working climate between the unions and the administration.
48
This positive climate coupled with the ability to enter into long range financial
planning did indeed then allow the district to pursue lowering class sizes and
employing more reading teachers on the elementary level.
Thirty-seven percent of the superintendents identified completion of the
project as their vision. Their vision was apparently a sense of completion of an
important project. The vision of fourteen percent of the superintendents was an
idea; for the good of students. The Superintendent from Westminster, California,
reported that preparing for growth would achieve his vision of reduced class size
for the good of students through building additional classrooms.
Enlisted Others. Securing "buy in" of followers to achieve a personal best
effort is important. Superintendents worked hard to secure buy in to reach their
goal. They attracted others, enlisted supporters to share the vision, worked at
communicating the purpose, and then elicited support of the vision. They enlisted
others by seeking their input and expertise using peers, teachers, and parents to
accomplish their personal best on a collective basis.
Superintendents enlisted others in various ways. Empowerment was most
prevalent, as indicated in Figure 4 (45 percent). The superintendents delegated
decision-making to the group, giving them the power to act.
One example of how superintendents used empowerment to enlist others
was provided by Steve Voelz from Iowa. He empowered the staff by giving them
the power to establish the staff development program for the district. He secured
buy in through enlistment of the team to make staff development decisions.
49
Another example came from a California superintendent. He empowered
a community task force to meet, make decisions, and give a board report
regarding the interim sessions in year-round education.
Twenty-seven percent enlisted others through the power of their position.
For example, a California superintendent appointed the committees to work on
high performance schools no one declined, everyone accepted. He simply used
the power of his position to enlist others. There were many examples of enlisting
others through position power. In "taking charge" of the Redlands, California,
School District, Ron Franklin expedited the process by appointing many
committees in a very short time. "The staff and I both knew what we had to do so
we just got at it," said Franklin. "I simply named the committee members to save
time."
Fourteen percent of the superintendents said they enlisted others using the
value of "helping students" as an inducement for involvement. They cajoled,
solicited, and explained the importance of the personal best effort as it related to
the helping of students. The superintendents played to the inherent reason most
educators are in the profession: to help students.
50
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Position Power (27.0%)-
Empowerment (45.0%)
Figures. Percentages for the Strategy of Enlisting Others.
Modeled the Wav.
Modeling the way is behaving in a way which is consistent with the beliefs
that must drive the empowerment effort; for the superintendents, it was leading by
example. When asked if they modeled the way, ninety-eight percent of the
superintendents said they led by example. This paralleled Kouzes and Posner's
(1988) study, where they found that ninety-five percent of the CEOs in their study
modeled the way through planning and leading by example. Bill Lawson,
Superintendent from Westminster, California, put it best, "Modeling the way is
being true to your values. 'A role model* is when your actions reflect your beliefs."
The how of modeling the way was demonstrated by Superintendent Don
Lindstrom, Encinitas, California, in accomplishing his personal best, establishing
an Effective Schools Process: "I modeled the way, I practiced what I preached,
51
I did what I said." To model the way, superintendents: (a) set the example, and (b)
planned small wins.
Set the Example. When asked how superintendents set the example, sixty-
four percent responded that they "walked the talk," and practiced what they
preached, as shown in Figure 6. They stood up for their beliefs, many times under
fire from the community and teachers. They live by professed values, even when
under fire. They led by doing. In the determination of new elementary school
boundaries in San Marcos, California, Superintendent Mac Bernd, "personally
conducted all community meetings and became a 'lightening rod' for the district."
Mac Bernd set the example for the district by personally espousing quality and
equality education for all children in the heat of action. He set the example by
talking, listening, and telling of his strong belief in the new boundaries that would
balance the size of the elementary sites, stabilize staffing, and equalize class sizes.
Bernd pressed for this to the community because he believed it was in the best
interest of students. He was criticized, but he persevered. He made his vision
tangible and the community ultimately accepted the new boundaries. Bernd
illustrated how superintendents set the example by walking the talk.
Seventeen percent said they set the example by managing their time.
Superintendents reported it was important that their team believed that managing
time results in more positive and additional interaction with students. They then set
the example by managing their own time effectively. Examples of managing their
time were: specific, announced, and adhered to starting and ending times for
meetings and the use of organizational planning books.
52
Visibility
Fast Reactions
Time Management
Walk the Talk (Model)
Other! 12%
30 40 Percent
Figure 6. Percentages of How Superintendents Set the Example.
Planned Small Wins. The superintendents planned ways for others to
experience successes along the way. The use of small wins was illustrated by
Superintendent Ron Hockwalt, El Cajon, California, in establishing a model
education center in the C^on Valley Union District. He wanted to move carefully
and be successful witii each step. Hockwalt wanted to start with a small win. He
brought in consultants to work with the team for two days to enhance their skills
in group dynamics and decision-making. This was followed up with team meetings
utilizing their newly found skills, and meeting to carefully explain the impact their
decisions were making on the ultimate goal. They made such progress that at the
end of one year a model education center had been established. The small wins
added up to a personal best success.
53
Encouraged the Heart.
The fourth most frequently used practice superintendents utilized in
achieving success in their personal best effort was to encourage the heart. The
work involved with their personal best effort was long and arduous. It was
important to encourage others to continue their quest. They gave heart by visibly
recognizing people's contribution to the vision. Jacquelin Spacek from Lakeside,
California, sent congratulatory notes and memos to each of the team members
involved with implementing a site-based management process. She also met with
each team member individually to give positive feedback, personal strokes, and
support. She said a part of a leader's job is to show employees they can win, to
take the lead in encouraging the heart to carry on.
The two strategies for encouraging the heart were: (a) recognized individual
contributions, and (b) celebrated team accomplishments. Figure 7 shows how
individual contributors were recognized and Figure 8 shows how team
accomplishments were recognized.
Recognized Individual Contributions. Recognizing contributions led to
positive, high-level achievements. Seventy-nine percent of the superintendents
reported they recognized individuals. Praise, coaching, and personal notes of a
job well-done ranked first on the leader's method of recognizing individual
contributors to the personal best. Fifty-four percent used day-to-day thank you's
and strokes.
A superintendent from California described a common strategy. He gave
54
"warm fuzzies" for a job well-done. These warm fuzzies were continuous thank-
yous and strokes.
Twelve percent of the respondents recognized Individual contributors by
giving them plaques, pins, and certificates. Marty Lucas from Iowa gave pins to
all of the staff members for their help in determining district needs.
Dave Darnell, Mason City, Iowa, hosted a district-wide formal recognition
dinner for individuals who have contributed to the success of the effective schools
effort. Ten percent of the superintendents recognized individual contributions by
having formal dinners and presentations to encourage the heart.
No Answer
Other
Formal Dinners & Presentations
Plaques, Pins, Certificates
Day to Day ITwik You's;Slrokes g
20 30 40 Percent
Roure 7. Recognition of Individual Contributors to the Personal Best.
Celebrated Team Accomplishments. Eighty-three percent of the
superintendents celebrated team accomplishments to encourage the heart. Figure
55
8 shows how superintendents celebrated team accomplishments. The strategy of
celebrating team accomplishments was an area of difference with the CEOs from
Kouzes and Posner's (1988) research. Celebrating team accomplishments,
according to their data, were such activities as formal dinners and gifts. The
superintendents in this study explicitly pointed out that they saw day-to-day thank
yous and strokes as a form of celebration. Thirty-nine percent said they gave day-
to-day thank yous and strokes to team members to encourage the heart. Roland
Skumowitz of Homeland, California, continuously gave personal thank yous
(defined as a team celebration by superintendents) and sent notes to team
members to encourage them in their quest to acquire a school site for the first
new school in the district.
Formal dinners and award ceremonies were used by thirty-five percent of
the superintendents. The certificated and classified staffs of South Bay, California,
celebrated at their "Conference of Champions Dinner" where the purpose was to
recognize those who had made significant contributions to reach the established
goal of 100% of their schools named in the high performance category. The South
Bay Conference of Champions Dinner was focused on team success. Each team
that had achieved their school named in the high performance category received
atrophy. Each team member was given a pin. There were speeches, thank-yous,
and cheering.
56
Formal Dinners & Awards
Day to Day Thank You'srStrokes
*CMnotgiveara^x)nse'
*No Response
Rallies 14%
0 S 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 Percent
Figure 8. Celebrating Team Accomplishments.
Challenged the Process
Challenging the process was identified as the fifth most frequently used
practice. Challenging the process is the willingness of the superintendent to
experiment and take risks. Each of the personal bests involved some form of
challenge. Each of the responding superintendents said they challenged the status
quo to complete their project. They indicated they took risks and communicated
the vision.
In challenging the process, the superintendents utilized two strategies; they
(a) searched for opportunities, and (b) experimented and took risks.
57
Searched for Opportunities. Kouzes and Posner (1988) defined the strategy
of searching for opportunities as challenging the status quo. Superintendents
confronted status quo; the way one district has always done things in its business-
as-usuai environment. The superintendents stepped out in front with their personal
best effort to show others the direction in which to head. All fifty-two of the
superintendents indicated they challenged the status quo.
The superintendents (92%) actually initiated and assumed the responsibility
of the project. In contrast, Kouzes and Posner (1988), found in their study of five
hundred corporate CEOs that more than half the cases were initiated by someone
other than the CEO. Product innovations were just as likely to come from
customers and line employees as from the CEO.
Tom Williams of Belmond, Iowa, provided an example of how
superintendents searched for opportunities. Superintendent Williams changed the
status quo by initiating a whole grade-sharing plan between Belmond and Klemme,
Iowa. Williams faced a formidable challenge. The status quo was Individual
classes in the separate communities of Klemme and Belmond. The two districts
consolidated and the challenge was to combine these grades for attendance in
one of the communities. Strong community feelings and potential loss of
community Identity stood in the way of change. Whole-grade sharing did come
about with the seventh and eighth grades attending Klemme and grades 9-12
attending Belmond. Williams had confronted and changed the status quo, he had
searched for opportunities.
58
In creating a community redevelopment agency for the first time, David
Blumenthal of Coronado, California, ventured in uncharted waters as he used a
never-before-tried law to establish the agency to guide redevelopment for the
district. He used a newly written law to finance the building of new schools.
Experimented and Took Risks. As previously noted, every superintendent
reported they initiated change and challenged the status quo. They indicated an
openness to new ideas and a willingness to listen to team members. This strategy,
as related, was inherent to change and the willingness of superintendents to
experiment, take risks, learn from mistakes and successes, and convert them to
the good of the organization.
Harold Prior, a superintendent from Algona, Iowa, was willing to experiment
and take risks. Prior set about to establish a teacher evaluation instrument and
procedure in spite of the fact that a similar effort had failed in the Algona District
four years eariier. Not only had it failed in an earlier attempt, negative feelings and
impressions still existed. Superintendent Prior was very aware of the risk Involved
in his effort. But he moved forward, set up committees, listened, cajoled, and
allowed the team members to make mistakes. After six months of meeting, talking,
and writing, a new teacher evaluation instrument and procedure were in place in
the Algona School District.
59
Personal Best Leader Reflections
Learning to Lead.
How does a superintendent become tiie best leader possible? The
superintendents in the study were asked, "Just how have you gained the skills to
lead?" Figure 9 shows how they obtained the skills. Most learned from others
(34%), many from experience and educational training, and one of ten from
reading. Below are anecdotes which further clarify how superintendents learn to
lead.
Learned from Others (34.0%)
Experience (28.0%)
Educational Training (20.0%)
Reading (10.0%)
Other (8.0%)
Raure 9. How Superintendents Learned to Lead.
60
Learning from Others. A third of the superintendents indicated they learned
to lead from others; through mentors as informal sponsors and coaches; these
fellow superintendents were very helpful. Each of the superintendents were part
of a network. Trusted colleagues gave them feedback that helped them learn to
lead. Joseph Fazio, Castaic, California, learned to lead by "observing and working
with leaders I valued and wanted to emulate." Mac Bemd, San Marcos, California,
learned by "listening to those who are older and wiser, and by watching those who
are successful and borrowing aspects of their style." These significant others are
not always educators; four superintendents named their father as the significant
Influence on their learning to lead.
Experience. Twenty-eight percent of those surveyed indicated they learned
by doing. Don Andrews, Wallkill, New York, said he learned to lead through
experience. "1 sat in the same chairs as my building administrators."
The superintendents did not provide anecdotes about their educational
training and how reading helped them to lead.
Teach Someone Else.
The superintendents were asked if they were to teach someone else about
leadership, based on their personal best effort, "what would you tell others to do
to be an effective leader?" Figure 10 shows twenty-nine percent of the educational
leaders said they would teach someone else to involve others. This was hardly
surprising since involving others was the most important practice the
superintendents utilized in achieving their personal best effort. Modeling (20%),
having a vision (15%), and developing trust (14%) were other approaches
61
suggested by superintendents as to how others could achieve personal best. The
remainder of the responses (22%) fell Into categories such as having a system,
communicating, taking risks, and others.
Other
Motivate [
Take Risks |
CommunicatB
HaveaSystem ;
Develop Trust
al
HaveaVision
Model
involve Othets
-a
£
15% i 20% 1
10 15 Percent
20 25 30
Figure 10. Percentages of What Superintendents Would Teach About Leadership.
Support of Participants.
A major factor in achieving a personal best effort was acquiring buy in by
members of the team. The data clearly illustrates most superintendents were able
to increase the level of support of the people who helped them achieve their
personal best.
Table 6 shows that nine percent of the superintendents reported they had
substantial backing (at or above the 80% level) at the beginning of the project while
62
54% said that support had reached that high level at the conclusion of the project.
Sixty percent of the superintendents reported that backing by participants was
below the 20 percent level at the beginning of the effort while only 13 percent of
the superintendents reported it fell below the 20 percent support level at the
conclusion of the project.
Table 6
Percent Level of Support of Participants
Beainnina of Proiect Conclusion of Proiect
Suoerintendents Participant SuDDort Suoerintendents
Participant $MPPPrt
Substantial Backers 9% Above 80% 54% Above 80%
30% Above 50% 95% Above 50%
Neutral 5% Above 80% 0% Above 80%
27% Above 50% 2% Above 50%
Opposed e)% Below 20% 13% Below 20%
Most Important Contributor.
When asked to identify the most important contributor to the success of
their personal best effort, one of three of the superintendents reported that
"involving others" was the most reported contributor to their success. Sixteen
63
percent of the superintendents reported that taking risks was a key while another
16% reported "envisioning tiie future" made a difference. Modeling was identified
as the most important contributor to their personal best effort by ten percent.
Communication, developing trust, a system, rewards, and other contributors
constituted 25% of the contribution in somewhat smaller, but relatively equal
distribution. Rgure 11 reports the most important contributors to the success of
the personal best effort identified by the superintendents.
Other! 5%
Communicated
Modeled
Envisioned
TookRIsteJ
Involved Others
Rewarded 2%
Had a System I 6% i
Developed Trust i 6% 8
10% t "tlTl
10 15 20 25 30 35
Figure 11. Contributors to the Success of the Personal Best Effort.
Organizational/Cultural Attributes of
Personal Best Effort
The literature is replete with suggestions as to what leaders should do to
manage the sociotechnical aspects of the organization. The superintendents were
64
asked to describe tlieir activities in the following: (a) planning structures and
systems used to organize and control the project, (b) values and standards which
guided their actions, (c) quotes and slogans utilized during their personal best
effort, and (d) getting the word out to the rest of the organization regarding the
success of the personal best. These are described below.
Planning Structures and Systems.
V\fliat structures and systems did superintendents use to plan, organize, or
control their project. Table 7 shows the development of actions plans was named
by 49% of the superintendents as the structure or system employed to plan and
control the project. John Wood of Beaumont, California, for example, utilized an
action plan with subject areas, levels of responsibility, and time lines. The task
force used an action plan to plan and organize their effort for Wood's personal
best effort of a strategic long-range plan for his district.
Twenty-three percent of the superintendents reported that empowering
teachers provided all the structure needed since it enabled teachers to become
strong, capable, and committed. Don Lindstrom, Encinitas, California, for example,
developed site-level teams whose function was to make building-level decisions
regarding the budget and staffing. Eighteen percent of the superintendents
developed measurable performance standards and structures for planning. Ten
percent provided other strategies.
65
Table 7
Frequencies and Percentages of Structures and Systems Utilized to Achieve
Personal Best Effort.
Structure/System Frequencies Percentages
Develop Action Plans 25 49%
Empower Teachers/Decision-Making 12 23%
Develop Performance Standards 10 18%
Other 5 10%
TOTAL 52 100%
Values or Standards.
What values or standards guided superintendents' actions during their
personal best effort? Figure 12 shows "caring about youngsters" guided 44
percent of the superintendents. Don Helms, Corona, California, had a personal
best effort which infused technology into the instruction in his district. The project
upon completion motivated and excited students, which improved test scores.
This guiding value or standard in implementing the program was that the persona!
best effort would "help prepare students for the future." In his words, "genuine
acts of caring can pull students forward."
66
Honesty guided thirty percent of the superintendents. Joseph Fazio of
Castaic, California, sought the return of the seventh and eighth grade education
from the high school district to the elementary district. This personal best effort
met with relatively strong opposition, and required heavy community involvement.
Fazio described it this way;
"We were honest in our assessment of what we could and could not do for the students. We told them the good, we told them the negatives, and we shared the reasons openly and honestly."
The personal best effort was very successful and Castaic has now returned the
seventh and eighth grades to the elementary district. Integrity was an important
value or standard. Seventeen percent of the superintendents reported that having
integrity was a very important value guiding their actions. Nine percent reported
other strategies.
Have Integrity
(17.0%)
Other (9.0%)- Care About
Children (44.0%)
Be Honest
(30.0%)-
Figure 12. Percentages of Values Which Guided Superintendent Actions.
Quotes and Slogans.
67
Superintendents were asked if they used a quote or slogan to show the way
in achieving their personal best effort. They were also asked to contribute a
quotation of their own regarding leadership. Below are some examples. A more
complete list can be found in the Appendix.
Qvpte?:
"If you try to please everyone in the grandstands, you'll end up sitting up there with them."
The trust level is the glue holding the organization together."
"I can make friends with competent people, but I can't make my friends competent."
Slogans:
"We dare to dream."
"With Excellence in Mind."
"We are Family."
Together We Can."
Getting the Word Out.
Superintendents were asked how they got the word out to the rest of the
organization regarding team accomplishments. Figure 13 shows 42% said they
used television. They did this both during and after the personal best effort. News
spots, educational channels, and cable channels were used to communicate their
success. A third used internal communication, such as newsletters, to let others
know of their accomplishments. The newspaper was utilized by 12% of the leaders
as an avenue of communication. Four percent used memos.
68
No Answer
Memo (9.0%)-
(120%) Newspaper
Television (42.0%)
Internal (33.0%)-Communication
Figure 13. Percentages of How Superintendents Got the Word Out to Others.
How Superintendents Want to be Remembered.
How would superintendents like to be remembered? Table 8 shows most
want to be remembered for "making a difference," that was for the good of
youngsters. They wanted to touch the lives of others and they also want to be
remembered as caring while some want to be remembered as honest (6%) and fair
(4%).
69
Table 8
Frequencies and Percentages of How Superintendents Want to be Remembered.
Remembered Frequencies Percent
Made a Difference 23 45%
Caring 18 34%
Honest 6 11%
Fair 4 8%
Other 1 2%
TOTAL 52 100%
Relationship Between District Size
and Personal Best Endeavor, Practice and Strategies
A chi-square test was run on each personal best survey question to test the
relationship between the size of the school district and the personal best endeavor,
practice, and strategies. Not one practice, strategy, feeling, or other related
question was significant at the .05 level. The factors utilized by superintendents in
achieving their personal best in education were independent of the size of the
school district.
70
Summary of Chapter
In this chapter the findings of the study were presented. These findings
include the identification of superintendent feelings and factors contributing to the
success of the superintendent's personal best effort.
Below is a summary of key findings in chapter IV:
(1) All of the superintendents personal best efforts were about change.
Improving climate was the area most likely to be targeted for change.
(2) The superintendents selected their respective personal best efforts
because they "wanted to make a difference."
(3) The relative importance of the most frequently used practices utilized
by superintendents when achieving their personal best effort is as
follows:
(a) enabled others to act;
(b) inspired a shared vision;
(c) modeled the way;
(d) encouraged the heart; and
(e) challenged the process.
(4) The superintendents used the following strategies in achieving their
personal best effort:
(a) fostered collaboration;
(b) strengthened others;
(c) envisioned the future;
(d) enlisted others;
71
(e) set the example;
(f) planned small wins;
(g) recognized contributors;
(h) celebrated accomplishments;
(i) searched for opportunities; and
Q) experimented and took risks.
(5) Involvement of others v/as the most important factor in the success
of the personal best.
(6) Superintendents feel excitement and fear when initiating the personal
best and of self-satisfaction upon completion of their effort.
(7) They were able to garner a higher level of support from the
conclusion of the effort.
(8) Superintendents learned to lead from others,
(9) Superintendents want to be remembered as making a difference.
(10) Superintendents tended to actually initiate and assume the
responsibility of their project while CEOs personal bests tended to be
initiated by someone else.
(11) There was no relationship between the size of the school district and
the personal best endeavor, practice, and strategies.
72
CHAPTER V. SUMMARY, DISCUSSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The primary purpose of this study was to identify and analyze the behavior
and thinking of school superintendents in achieving their personal best in
education. In this chapter, conclusions from the study are reported
recommendations for further research. The chapter has been organized into three
sections: (a) summary, (b) discussion, and (c) recommendations for further
research.
Summary
The study was designed to learn how superintendents lead. This study goal
was accomplished by analyzing how superintendents achieved their personal best
in education. Focus was on the practices; five fundamental behaviors that enabled
superintendents to get extraordinary things done, and strategies; ten behavioral
commitments that fell under the main practice headings that each superintendent
utilized to achieve their personal best effort. The study also examined the feelings
and perceptions of these superintendents as they achieved their personal bests.
This study was an extension of Kouzes* and Posner's (1988) work in the
private sector. Kouzes and Posner examined what practices and strategies over
five hundred business leaders utilized in achieving their personal best in the private
sector. The instrument, developed by Kouzes and Posner, was used to examine
what superintendents did to institute change and provide leadership in school
districts.
73
Fifty-two superintendents from California, Missouri, Iowa, and New York
responded to the survey which was analyzed by two individuals who were trained
to code and analyze the data. Below are the six research questions which framed
the results for examination.
Research Question One: What are the background and situational factors of
superintendents who achieve their personal best?
Research Question Two: What is the relative importance of five leadership
practices identified by business leaders for assisting superintendents to achieve
their personal best?
Research Question Three: How were the strategies utilized in carrying out
leadership practices?
Research Question Four: What are the feelings of superintendents during initiation
and implementation of a personal best?
Research Question Ave: Where did the superintendents learn the skills necessary
to lead?
Research Question Six: What is the relationship between the size of the school
district and the factors involved with the superintendents' persona! best?
Below is a summary of the findings related to these questions.
Background and Situational Factors.
The typical respondent had been a superintendent for eight years in a
district of6,400 students. Two-thirds of the superintendents chose a personal best
that took place in the last ten years. There was considerable variance in the length
74
of time the superintendents took to accomplish their personal best; 50 percent took
more than one year to complete their personal best effort, 31 percent took less
than a year, and 19 percent did not answer.
Each superintendent (52) recounted a story of dynamic change and bold
actions. These stories seldom sounded like those in leadership textbooks and
were not about staffing, directing, controlling, and other classic management tasks.
The most frequent area selected for the personal best effort was improving climate
(25%). The superintendents (40%) selected an area to target for improvement as
their personal best effort because they wanted to make a difference.
Leadership Practices.
The most frequently used practice of superintendents was enabling others
to act. This paralleled the findings of Kouzes and Posner (1988) as they found that
CEO's reported enabling others as their most frequently used practice in the world
of business. One third of the superintendents also identified the most important
contributor to the success of their personal best effort as the involvement of others.
Involvement of others apparently parallels enabling others. The strand of enabling
others was repeated over and over again by superintendents as the most important
aspect in fulfilling their project They had strong feelings regarding the fact that the
effect of enabling others to act made team members feel strong, capable, and
committed. The team members felt empowered to produce extraordinary results
to achieve the personal best efforts. The second most frequently used practice of
superintendents was inspiring a shared vision which was followed by modeling the
way, encouraging the heart, and challenging the process.
75
Leadership Strategies.
Kouzes' and Posner's research showed that leadership was an observable,
learnable, set of practices and for each of these practices leaders used strategies
that enabled them to achieve their personal best. The actions of superintendents
who achieved their personal best, paralleled those found in Kouzes' and Posner's
research. Superintendents apparently utilized similar types of strategies to
accomplish their personal best. They searched for opportunities in a similar
fashion, they envisioned the future much as CEOs did, fostered collaboration in a
similar fashion, as did other private sector counterparts. However, the strategies
of recognizing individual contributions and celebrating team accomplishments
were different. The CEO's celebrated and recognized in a formal fashion (dinners
and awards) while the superintendents celebrated successes and recognized
others in an informal way (strokes and thank you's).
Feelings.
The personal best effort provided superintendents with great challenge and
stimulated much anxiety. The superintendents reported feelings of excitement
(39%) and fear (37%) during the initiation of their personal best effort. They had
feelings of self-satisfaction (54%) and togetherness (20%) during implementation
of their personal best effort.
How Superintendents Learned to Lead.
The superintendents gained the skills to lead from various sources. Many
(34%) reported they learned to lead from others. These were most likely to be
mentors and peers. Twenty-eight percent said they learned from experience and
76
20% said they learned to lead from educational training.
District Size.
Regardless of the size of the district, superintendents basically utilized the
same types of practices and strategies.
Discussion
The data collected in this study paint a picture of how school
superintendents lead when they achieve their personal best. Each of the fifty-two
superintendents in this study told a story of bold actions and dynamic change.
Traditional thinking regarding how superintendents lead would have us believe that
the goal of leadership in an ideal school district would be to maintain order and
stability. Yet, superintendents in this study described their personal best effort in
terms of change, challenging the process, and of doing things that had never been
done before in their districts. Stories were of improving the climate, building
schools, effective school projects, and sweeping curriculum improvement.
The superintendents also reported feeling excitement, fear, frustration,
satisfaction, and togetherness during the initiation and implementation of their
personal best effort. It is important to inexperienced superintendents, school board
members, and experienced, practicing superintendents, to be aware that even
those who were most successful experience anxiety as they embark upon and
head toward the implementation of their personal best effort. A feeling of
excitement was present in both the initiation and implementation of the projects.
In no single instance in any of the personal best efforts did any of the
superintendents use the word boring. Neither did any superintendent ever use
77
ordinary, routine, or dull. Top-flight performances engender excitement. We tend
to associate doing our best with experiences that ignite enthusiasm within us.
When it comes to excelling as a superintendent, the memorable times are filled with
excitement. They arouse feelings of passion. Building an administrative team,
starting a year-round education program, and turning around a negative board
climate are all exciting endeavors. Whether a leader is overcoming adversity or
creating something unique and new, or is excited by the accompanying activities.
It is important to note that successful superintendents experience fear. General
Schwartzkopf recently noted that a good soldier should experience fear going into
battle - it helps him or her to proceed more intelligently. Perhaps there is some
similarity between going into battle and cornmandeering a major change in a
school district.
One might hope that all superintendents would feel the sense of satisfaction
that superintendents who achieve their personal best experience in carrying out
and completing their project. Perhaps we should find more and better ways for
superintendents to share those feelings with others who hesitate to take that
difficult first step in breaking the status quo which means change. Perhaps if more
superintendents understood the feelings of satisfaction, excitement, and joy of a
personal best effort they would be more prone to initiate change.
Traditional thinking about superintendents as leaders tell us the
superintendent is basically one of control; control of financial resources, time, and
people. Conversely, the data from this study showed the big job was enabling
other to act and enlisting the support and assistance of all of those involved with
78
change and adjustment. The superintendents involved those who must live with
the results, encouraged collaboration, built teams, and empowered others. The
word we was emphasized as opposed to the word /. The implications for school
districts and higher education is to provide superintendents with training and
inservice to learn how to effectively enable others to act.
In enabling others to act, the superintendents actively involved team
members in decision-making. The superintendents considered the needs and
interests of others. They said involvement of others was the key to success in
achieving their personal best. They said it over and over again in relating their
efforts. An old Chinese proverb illustrates the importance of involving others; of
empowering those who we work with to make decisions;
"If you want one year of prosperity, grow grain. If you want ten years of prosperity, grow trees. If you want one hundred years of prosperity, grow people." (Kouzes and Posner, 1988, p. 181.)
It is important for us to understand the impact of empowerment on success. The
more people believe they can influence and control the organization, the greater
organizational effectiveness and team member buy in will be.
The implications for school districts and higher education is again, to provide
superintendents with training and inservice to learn how to effectively enable others
to act
Traditional leadership teaching tells us the superintendent must focus on the
short term, the interim budget, the monthly board meeting, and quarterly reports.
This study found that superintendents who got things done had future orientation,
they had vision. They told of a sense of what is possible at a future point in time,
79
if all work together to achieve a common purpose. The superintendents also
stressed the importance of inspiring others to achieve their vision.
Clearly, the leadership practice of inspiring a shared vision involved being
forward-looking and Inspiring. The superintendents fulfilled the hopes and dreams
of others to enable them to see the exciting potential for the future. Superintendent
after superintendent reported that they were very excited and enthusiastic about
their personal best efforts. Their feeling of enthusiasm was also felt by the people
they led. TTie superintendents' belief in and enthusiasm for the vision were the
ingredients that sparked the flame of inspiration.
But, visions seen only by the superintendent are insufficient to create
change and fulfill personal best efforts. Superintendents must get others to see the
exciting possibilities of tiie future. It is important that the superintendent
communicate the purpose and convince others to support the vision.
Superintendents must take the time to teach others the vision.
Traditional leadership teaching tells us superintendents tend to be analytical
(separating emotion from work) and aloof. This study describes superintendents
as very caring human beings who want to make a difference for our youngsters.
They related that they reflect their feelings to those they work with and it helps to
develop a feeling of family through caring. We work with people on a constant
basis. Human beings are both our raw material and product in education. We
must exhort basic human attributes to succeed in our environment. Caring was
reported over and over by superintendents as how tiiey want to be remembered.
They modeled caring on a day-to-day basis. Their genuine acts of caring drew
80
people forward to achieve their personal best efforts. It is crucial for educational
leaders to understand the emission of the emotion of caring helped the
superintendents to succeed.
This research also offered insight as to where superintendents learned to
lead. The data showed that the highest percentage of superintendents learned
from others. They said mentors are very valuable as informal coaches and
sponsors. The implication for assisting superintendents in learning to lead is to set
up a coaching and mentor process and network. Professional organizations,
school districts, and universities should work together to accomplish this research
recommendation. Coordinated involvement and organization by these three pivotal
entities could perhaps establish such activities as a functional mentor program.
Not just an assignment of a mentor, but exercises, meeting times, and an
evaluation of progress.
Superintendents also said they learned to lead from experience. They felt
there was a strong case to learn by doing. The implication is for school boards to
heed this fact when hiring superintendents. Superintendents said they needed to
walk in various administrative shoes before acquiring adequate experience to be
a superintendent. The most often mentioned shoes was the fact that the
superintendents felt they needed building principalship experience before becoming
a superintendent.
They also reported they learned to lead from educational training. Graduate
school and workshops were important in acquiring the skills to lead. Colleges and
universities should assure the availability of the highest quality courses and
81
workshops for superintendents or aspiring superintendents.
It was not surprising that the size of a district had no meaningful impact on
how superintendents identified and analyzed factors in achieving their personal
best effort. Superintendents from small schools work and think as superintendents
from large schools do. They utilized the same practices, the same strategies, they
cared the same, and they learned to lead from the same sources.
Leadership of the superintendent is a process which involves skills and
abilities and how those acquired skills and abilities can be put to use. This study
will assist superintendents in learning more about the how of leadership through
identifying and analyzing the factors utilized in achieving their personal best in
education. This study will allow superintendents to;
(a) assess their strengths and weaknesses as leaders in comparison to the
data,
(b) learn how to involve, inspire, and motivate others toward a common goal,
(c) learn important skills in building a team, and
(d) understand where and how to learn to lead.
Recommendations for Further Research
The following recommendations are submitted for further consideration for
researchers investigating what superintendents do to institute change and exert
leadership in school systems (i.e., how the superintendent leads):
1. A study of the teachers representing the fifty-two districts used in this
research might be conducted to compare their perceptions of their leaders' actions
and those of the superintendent.
82
2. Separate studies aimed at each of the five practices could be carried
out to give an in-depth look reflecting a high degree of specificity on how
superintendents lead.
3. A comparison study of how principals identify and analyze factors in
achieving their personal best in education should be conducted.
This study is about the how of leadership. How do superintendents get
other people to want to follow? How do superintendents get other people, by free
will and free choice, to move forward on a common purpose? Just how do
superintendents get others to want to do things?
This study is about the most frequently used practices superintendents use
to turn challenging opportunities into successes.
This study will help superintendents develop their abilities to get
extraordinary things done in their districts. From an analysis of the personal bests,
a model of the how of leadership of superintendents was developed. Because
leadership development Is ultimately self-development, the findings of this study
presents a personal challenge to superintendents.
83
BIBLIOGRAPHY
American Association of School Administrators. Guidelines for the Preparation of School of School Administrators (2nd Ed.). Arlington, VA: AASA, 1982.
Amundson, Kristen. Challenges for School Leaders. Arlington, VA: AASA, 1988.
Bass, B. M. Leadership and Performance Bevond Expectations. New York: Free Press, 1985.
Bennis W. "View From the Top." In W. Bennis, Leadership bv Warren Bennis. p. 26. Cincinnati, OH: University of Cincinnati, 1984.
Bennis, Warren and Burt Nanus. Leaders. New York: Harper and Row Publishers, 1985.
Bird, Tom and Judith Warren Little. "Instructional Leadership in Eight Secondary Schools." Boulder, CO: Center for Action Research, Inc., June, 1985.
Borg, Walter R. and Meridith D. Gall. Educational Research. New York: Longman Inc., 1983.
Bradford, D. L., and A. R. Cohen. Managing for Excellence. New York: Wiley, 1984.
Bums, J. M. Leadership. New York: Harper & Row, 1978.
Cialdini, R. B. Influence: How and Whv People Aoree to Things. New York: Marrow, 1984.
Clymer, A. "Low Marks for Executive Honesty." New York Times, June 9,1985, p. IF.
84
Collier, Virginia Lester. "Identification of Skills Perceived by Texas Superintendents as Necessary for Successful Job Performance." Ph.D. dissertation, the University of Texas at Austin, 1987.
Cook, William J. The Urgency of Change: The Metamorphosis of America's Schools. Montgomery: Undergod Press, 1988.
Covey, Stephen R. The Seven Habits of Hiohlv Effective People. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989.
Cuban, Larry. 'Transforming the Frog Into a Prince: Effective Schools Research, Policy, and Practice at the District Level." Harvard Educational Review 54 (2) (May 1984): 129-151.
Deal, T. E., and A. A. Kennedy. Corporate Cultures. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1982.
DeBruyn, Robert. Causing Others to Want Your Leadership. Manhattan: R.L DeBruyn, Associates, 1976.
Federman, I. "A Personal View of Leadership." Presentation to the Executive Seminar in Corporate Excellence, Santa Clara University, October 16,1983.
Fisher, R., and W. Ury. Getting to Yes. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981.
Frasher, James M. and Paul Schoemaker. "Superintendents' Decisions." Journal of Research 8 (3) (March, 1982): 261-268.
Harvey, Thomas R., and Michael R. Slater. "The Superintendency, A Leadership Vision for the 1990's." Report of the California Advanced Academy for Executive Leaders - March, 1990.
Henson, Kenneth T. "Strategies for Overcoming Barriers to Educational Change." NAASP Bulletin 71 (March, 1987): 125-7.
85
Hord, Rutherford, Huling-Austin, and Gene E. Hall. Taking Charge of Change. Alexandria, Virginia: ASCD Publishing, 1987.
Kanter, R. M. Presentation on The Change Masters. Santa Clara University, March 26, 1984.
Kelly, Edgar A. "Leadership Techniques for Principals." Reston, Virginia: National Association of Secondary School Principals, 1980.
Kohn, A. No Contest: The Case Against Competition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1986. Kouzes, James M., and Barry Posner. The Leadership Challenge. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1988.
Loucks-Horsley, Susan, and Leslie F. Hergert. An Action Guide to School Improvement. Alexandria, Virginia: ASCD Publishing, 1985.
Murphy, Joseph, and Philip Hallenger. "The Superintendent as Instructional Leader: Findings from Effective School Districts." Presentation at AERA - April, 1986.
National Commission on Excellence in Education. A Nation at Risk. Washington, D.C.: Author, 1983.
O'Reilly, C. "Charisma as Communication: The Impact of Top Management Credibility and Philosophy on Employee Involvement." Paper Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, Boston, 1984.
Patterson, Purkey, and Jackson V. Parker. Productive School Systems for a Nonrational Worid. Alexandria, Virginia: ASCD Publishing, 1986.
Peters, T. J. "Developing Distinctive Skills." Presentation to the Executive Seminar in Corporate Excellence, Santa Clara University, February 13,1985.
Peters, T. J., and R. H. Waterman. In Search of Excellence. New York: Harper and Row,. 1982.
86
Rosenholtz, Susan. Teachers Workplace: White Plains: Longman Press, 1988.
Rowan, R. The Intuitive Manager. New York: Little, Brown, 1986.
Ruch, R. S., and R. Goodman. Images at the TOP. New York: Free Press, 1983. Schein, E.H. Organizational Culture and Leadership: A Dynamic View. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1985.
Sciafani, Susan K. "AASA Guidelines for Preparation of School Administrators: Do They Represent the Actual Behaviors of Superintendents?" Ph.D. dissertation, the University of Texas at Austin, 1987.
Shelve, Linda, and Marian Schoenkeit. Leadership: Examining the Elusive. Alexandria, Virginia: ASCD Publishing, 1987.
Spradley, James. The Ethnographic Interview. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1979.
Sweeney, James. "Research Synthesis on Effective School Leadership." Educational Leadership 39 (5) (February, 1982): 346-352.
Sweeney, James. "Principals Can Provide Instructional Leadership It Takes Commitment." Education 103 (2) (February, 1982): 204-207.
Terry, Robert. "Leadership. From Skills to Authentic Engagement." The Exchange 1 (May, 1989): 1-2.
Texas State Board of Education. "Summary Analysis of Responsibility/Leadership." A Policy Statement: A State in Motion in the Midst of a Nation at Risk. (June, 1983): 150-1.
Tjosvold, D. Working Together to Get Things Done. Lexington, Mass.: Heath, 1986.
Tunstall, W. Brooke. "Cultural Transition at AT&T." Sloan Management Review, Fall 1983.
87
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study would not have been possible without the support and encouragement of my
family, friends, and colleagues who taught me much about myself.
A thank you to each of my committee members: Dr. Richard Manatt, Dr. Dan Reschly,
Dr. Shirley Stow, and Dr. Robert Thomas. A special thank you to my major professor,
Dr. Jim Sweeney. The backing, late-night phone calls, multiple FAX jobs, direction, and
friendship extended were the backbone of my ability to endure.
I also want to extend a special thank you to Jamie Blomgren and Kris Benyshek,
Educational Administration secretaries. They answered hundreds of questions via the
phone from California. You are appreciated and remembered.
I dedicate this book to all of the superintendents who responded to the survey, my family,
friends, and Jim and Jan Sweeney. Thank you for your love and support.
88
APPENDIX A.
CONSENT FORM FOR SURVEY
AND CORRESPONDENCE
RIVFSSIOE COUNTY OFFICE OF EDUCATION
OFFICE OF THE DEPUTY SUPERINTENDENT RESEARCH PROJECT REQUEST
Researcher(s) x- x.
Addresa 7 Telephone (work)/^Wy^^
Agency/School /yk '
Contact/Advisor S Advisor ' s Telephonet^^jj,^^
Tui. Of
Projects will not be considered for approval without attachment of the
following:
DO NOT SUBMIT ORIGINALS
1 » Auôw&aCL OC SLuùjr 2. Tests,(;^urweyjpor questionnaires 3. ProjectTtmffine 6. Informed Consent (if required—see Privacy Rights Statement)
If this project is approved, no changes will be made in the scope or structure of the study without approval of the Deputy Superintendent's Office. It is also agreed that an abstract of the final report of the research findings will be provided to the Riverside County Office of Education. Researcher, by signature below, has read and agrees to comply with the research guidelines at the Riverside County Office of Education.
BRIEFLY DESCRIBE HOW YOUR STUDY WILL CONTRIBUTE TO THE RIVERSIDE COUNTY OFFICE OF EDUCATION (how it will help students, teachers, parents or the field of education):
BRIEFLY DESCRIBE ASSISTANCE REQUIRED TO COMPLETE THE STUDY:
* Administrative peuonnel and/or school involvement required ^ ^ if//
* Number and characteristics of students desired ^
* Classroom/teacher tin^required^^'^^
Researcher's Signature
Advisor's Signature (if appropriate)
Date A
Date
Project Approved ! Fr-jjecc Denied
Comments :
Deputy Superintendent
Approved by Cabinet: 5-8-89
Date: /%'
C - 1
Page 2 of 2
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3. The study may not be undertaken for commercial purposes.
4. Excessive time requirements that infringe on instructional time are
not permitted. However, when a study is approved and school staff
members agree to participate voluntarily, they may be expected to
cooperate for reasonable lengths of time.
5. The Riverside County Office of Education takes seriously its duty to
protect its personnel, students, and their families from invasion of
privacy, breach of confidence, or other irresponsible acts performed
under the guise of research. It is contrary to Riverside County
Office of Education policy to permit researchers to ask students,
students' parents, or school staff members their age, home address,
occupation, extent of education, financial status, marital status,
ethnie vil&lû, religious belief, and the like. Any information from
school records and resources must be kept anonymous and only
generalized in the study. Names of personnel, students, or schools
must not be identified orally, in writing, electronically,
mechanically, or by any other means in reporting research findings.
Ordinarily, the researcher may say that the study was conducted in
proof of education.
6. The ethical principles that must be followed in all phases of
research are those observed by members of the American Educational
Research Association and the Americal Psychological Association as
stated in the latter's Ethical Principles in the Conduct of Research
with Human Participants (APA, 1983, and related publications).
Approved by Cabinet: 5-8-89
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Januarys, 1990
Dr. Robert J. Fisher Superintendent 980 North Ash Street Escondido, CA 92027
Dear Dr. Fisher:
I am currently in the middle of my research project for my Ph.D. The subject matter of the research deals with the superintendency and how we have dealt with our "Personal Best" during our years as a superintendent. The enclosed survey, which is based on Kouze and Posner's research in business, will attempt to paint-a picture of how the superintendent communicates, motivates and leads during their "Personal Best". I have been in contact with Dr. Carol Pugmire, San Diego County Office of Education, in acquiring your name. One hundred superintendents in California were selected to be a part of this research. The survey will take approximately 35 minutes to complete and will be an essential part of the data used in my research project. Enclosed please find a sun/ey and a self-addressed envelope to me.
Thank you in advance for your input regarding this important project.
:hools ool District
DL:sf
92
APPENDIX B.
PERSONAL BEST SURVEY
93
RECALLING A "PERSONAL BEST"
LEADERSHIP EXPERIENCE
David Long, Superintendent Banning Unified School District
161 W. Williams Street Banning, California 92220
Purpose:
The purpose of this exercise is to gather data to see how superintendent's lead. The information gathered will give superintendents a picture of the practices of and the strategies involved in the leadership of school district chief executive officers. James M. Kouzes and Barry Z. Posner examined the experiences of 500 middle- and senior-level managers at their personal bests. This survey is an adaptation of their instrument.
Getting Ready:
1. Completion of this survey will take from forty-five to sixty minutes.
Definitions:
In this assignment you are being asked to describe a Personal Best Leadership Experience. Here is what is meant by these terms:
Personal Best:
A "personal best" experience is an event (or series of events) which you believe to be your individual standard of excellence. It is your own "record-setting performance," a time when you did your very best in your role as superintendent. It is something you use to measure yourself by; a time you look upon as your peak or high-performance experience. A useful and simple guide to the selection of your "personal best" is: "WHEN I THINK ABOUT THIS IT MAKES ME SMILE A LOT."
gxp rlçnçg:
You have been involved in many experiences as a superintendent. For purposes of this data collection you are being asked to focus your thinking on only those in which you were the superintendent.
94
When You Are Ready To Begin, Follow This Process:
1. Think about all the leadership experiences you have had as a superintendent. Let them pass by in your mind, as if you were viewing a movie of your leadership career or hearing a tape recording of your personal leadership history.
2. A few of these experiences will undoubtedly look, sound, or feel like personal best experiences. Select one of these personal best experiences.
3. Spend some time getting a clear mental picture of the extraordinary experience. See, hear, and feel it again as intensely as you can. Get as vivid an image as possible.
4. Once you have recalled and reviewed your personal best leadership experience, turn to the worksheets and answer all the questions.
WHEN YOU ARE READY, PLEASE TURN THE PAGE AND BEGIN RECORDING YOUR PERSONAL BEST CASE
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RECALUNG A PERSONAL BEST
LEADERSHIP EXPERIENCE
Your Name: Today's Date
Title of Your Personal Best:
Name of District: Years as Superintendent;,
Size of District:
1. THE SITUATION
a. Where did this take place? Name of District/City:
b. When did this take place? How long did it take to complete from start to finish?
c. Who initiated this project? (You, teacher, principal, etc.)
d. Approximately how long did it take from inception to becoming
e. Who else was Involved, either directly or indirectly, in the project? It is not necessary to name everyone. Please just indicate their functional areas, and whether they were supervisors, peers, teachers, parents, etc.
96
f. What was your specific role or title in this project?
g. Indicate any awards, bonuses, or other special recognition you and/or your group received.
MOTIVATION AND CHALLENGES
a. If you were the one to initiate this project, what motivated vou to want to do it?
b. What did you do, if anything, to challenge the status QUO, the existing ways of doing things? What novel, or innovative, things did you do?
c. As best as you can recall, how would you describe vour feelings at the beginning of the project?
97
d. Approximately what percent of the people involved with the project were:
Beginning of Conclusion of the Project the Project
(a) Substantial backers
(b) Neutral
(c) Opposed
3. DESTINATIONS
a. As you looked forward to the time when the project would be completed, what was vour ideal outcome, vour vision?
b. If you used any slogans, metaphors, catchv phrases, logos, svmbols. etc., to describe your dream or vision, what were they?
c. How did you sell others on your project?
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4. INVOLVEMENT
a. Did you use any special methods or techniques to involve others in planning and decision making?
b. How did you build a team out of those individuals who worked for you?
c. How did you develop trust and respect among those who worked on the project?
5. LEADER ACTIONS
a. For this project, what were the values (standards) you believed should guide everyone's actions?
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b. How did you show others, bv vour own example, that you were serious about these values and standards? How did you "lead by example?"
c. What structures and systems did you use to plan, organize, or control the project?
d. What dramatic or unusual actions, if any, did you take to get people to pay attention to important aspects of the project?
6. ENCOURAGEMENT
a. How did your team celebrate its accomplishments, its milestone achievements?
100
b. How did you recognize individual contributors? Any special incentive systems, recognition programs, etc.?
c. How did you get the word out to the rest of the organization about your group's accomplishments?
7. SUMMARY
Please review your responses to items 1 through 6. In summary, what would you say were the 5-7 key leadership actions you took which enabled this to be a personal best leadership experience?
1.
2. :
3.
4 .
5 .
6
7.
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8. CHARACTER OF THE EXPERIENCE:
a. What five or six words would you use to best describe the character (the fgel, the spirit, the nature, the Quality of this experience?
b. Please write down a few words which describe how vou felt personally as the leader of this experience?
9. LEADERSHIP LESSONS:
a. What did vou learn about leadership style and practice from this "personal best leadership experience?"
b. if you were going to teach someone else about leadership based upon your own personal best experience, what morals and lessons about leadership would you pass along? What would you tell others to do to be an effective leader?
102
c. Of all the things that contributed to the success of this project --whether it was an action you took or some other attribute -- what was the most important contributor to the project's success? What action, attribute, etc., made the most difference:
d. If you were going to contribute one Quotation of vour own, one personal saying, to a book about leadership, what would that quotation be?
10. IN CONCLUSION:
a. As a leader, how is it that you would most like to be remembered?
b. Why did vou select this project to write about? When you look back on it, what made this one so special, unique, memorable?
103
c. How have you learned to lead? Just how have you gained the skills to lead? Please select and rank order the three ways which have contributed most to your leadership development:
#1.
#2.
#3.
104
APPENDIX C.
CODING MAP. CODING FORM,
AND CODER WORKSHOP AGENDA
105
DATA CODING: "Personal Best"
David Long
Column Variable Name Code
1 - 3 identify Number 4 - 5 Title 6 - 7 Years as Superintendent 8 Size of District
9 10
Where When
Demographics Demographics Demographics Demographics
Situation Situation
11 How Long Situation
12
13
Who Initiated
Time (Inception to Operation)
Situation (Who)
Situation (Time)
14 Who Else involved Situation (Involve)
0 - 5,000 = 1 5,001 - 10,000 = 2 10.001 - 15.000 = 3 Over 15,000 = 4
See Attached Sheets Before 1950 = 1 1951 - 1960 = 2 1961 -1970 = 3 1971 - 1980 = 4 1981 - 1990 = 5
Less than i Mo = 1 1 - 3 M o n t h s = 2 4 - 6 Months = 3 7 - 9 M o n t h s = 4 Over 9 Months = 5
You = 1 Teacher = 2 Principal = 3 Other = 4
Less than 1 Mo = 1 1 - 3 Months = 2 4 - 6 M o n t h s = 3 7 - 9 M o n t h s = 4 Over 9 Months = 5 10-12 Months = 6 1 - 2 Years = 7 2 - 3 Y e a r s = 8 Over 3 Years = 9
Supervisors (Board) = 1
Peers = 2 Teachers = 3 Parents = 4 Community Task
Force = 5 Board & Admin = 6 Bd & Teachers = 7 Board and Parents = 8
Teachers & Parents = 9
All = 10 Principals & Teachers = 11
Teachers, Principals & Bd. Members = 12
Other = 13
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15 Role In Project Situation (Role) Leader = 1 Role In Project Situation (Role) Assistance = 2 Chairperson = 3 Consultant = 4 Mediator = 5 Facilitator = 6 Other = 7
16 Awards. Bonus, etc. Awards Yes = 1 No = 2
17 Kind of Award Kind Money = 1 Comp Time = 2 Recognition = 3 Other = 4
18 Initiated Motivation Yes = 1 No = 2
19 Motivation Help Students = 1 19 Improve District = 2 Parental Pressure = 3 Board Suggested = 4 Existing Problem = 5 Other = 6
20 Challenged Status Quo Motivation Yes = 1 No = 2
21 innovations Motivation Challenged Teachers = 1 21 Take Risks = 2 Communicate Vision = 3
Other = 5
22 Feelings Motivation Excitement = 1 Feelings Frustrations = 2 Happiness = 3 Degree of Fear = 4 Other = S
23 Backers (%) Beginning 0 -10% = 1 Backers (%) 11 -20% = 2 21 -30% = 3 31 -40% = 4 41 -50% = 5 51 -60% = 6 61 - 70% = 7 71 -80% = 8 81 -90% = 9 91 - 100% = 10
24 Backers (%) Conclusion 0-20% = 1 24 Backers (%) 21 -40% = 2
(Same as #23) 41 - 60% = 3 61 -80% = 4 81 -100% = 5
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25 Neutral (%) Beginning
26 Neutral (%) Conclusion
27 Opposed (%) Beginning
28 Opposed {%) Conclusion
29 Vision Destination
30
31
Slogans
Slogans
Destination
Destination (Examples)
32 Slogans Destination
0 -20% = 1 21 -40% = 2 41 -60% = 3 61 -80% = 4 81 - 100% = 5
0 -20% 1 21 -40% = 2 41 -60% = 3 61 -80% = 4 81 - 100% = 5
0 -20% = 1 21 -40% = 2 41 -60% = 3 61 -80% = 4 81 -100% = 5
0 -20% 1 21 -40% = 2 41 -60% = 3 61 -80% = 4 81 - 100% = 5
Set a New Standard of Excellence = 1 Fulfill a Statement of the Future = 2
To Complete the Project = 3
To Fulfill the Concept for the Good of Youngsters = 4
Other = 5
Yes = 1 No = 2
Student Oriented = 1 Teacher Oriented = 2 District Oriented = 3 Community Oriented = 4 Other = 5
Empowerment = 1 Develop Creativity = 2 Help Students = 3 Utilize their Expertise = 4 Position Power = 5 Other = 6
33 Techniques Involvement Yes = 1 No = 2
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34 Techniques
35 Build Team
36 Develop Trust
37 Values
38 Values
39 Example
Involvement; Examples
Involvement
Involvement
Leader Action
Leader Action
Leader Action
Develop Cooperative Goals = 1
Build Trust: Mutual Respect = 2
Build Teamwork = 3 - 4
Other = 5
Develop What People Have In Common = l Develop Understanding of Ea. Other's Needs = 2 Make People Feel United As a Team = 3 Work On Cooperative Goals = 4
Empowerment = 5 Expected Behavior = 6 Other = 7
Model a "High Trust" Level to Fellow Workers = 1 Meet Commitments & Keep Promises = 2 Be Sensitive to Peoples' Needs & Interests = 3
Be Open About Your Actions & Interest (Listen) = 4
Other = 5
Yes =1 No = 2
Honesty = 1 Caring = 2 Integrity = 3 Respect = 4 Trust = 5 Good for Youngsters = 6 Foster & Maintain Positive
Climate = 7 Seeks Input = 8 Respond Promptly = 9 Follow Policy & Procedure =10
Other =11
Yes = 1 No = 2
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40 Example Leader Action Walk the Talk (Modeled) = i How Time was Spent = 2 Reaction to Critical Incidents = 3
How Were Rewards Handled = 4 Symbols, Artifacts & Ceremonies = 5
Visibility = 6 Empowered = 7 Other = 8
41 Structure Leader Action Yes = 1 No = 2
42 Structure Leader Action
43
44
Unusual Actions
Unusual Actions
Leader Action
Leader Action
45
46
Celebrate
Celebrate
Encouragement
Encouragement
Develop Action Plans Empower Teacher For Decision- Making
Develop Measurable Perf. Standards install a Systematic Process for Rewarding Performance
Other
= 1
= 2
= 3
Yes = 1 No = 2
Publicity = 1 Accountability Checkpoints = 2
Presentations to peers and/or Community = 3
Empowerment = 4 Other = 5
Yes = 1 No = 2
Formal (dinners, formal award functions) = 1
Kickoff Mtgs. & Rallies = 2 Day to Day Thank You's and Strokes = 3
Media Publicity = 4 Sense of Accomplishment = 5
Other = 6
Yes = 1 No = 2
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48 Recognize Encouragement Planned Formal Celebrations = i
Day to Day Thank You's and Strokes = 2
Comp Time = 3 Media Publicity = 4 Monetary = 5 Plaques, Pins, Certificates = 6
Other = 7
49 Word Out Encouragement Yes = 1 No = 2
50 Word Out Encouragement Memo = 1 Newspaper = 2 Radio = 3 TV. = 4 Internal Communication (i.e.. Newsletter) = 5 Other = 6
51-57 Summary Actions Weight Priorities Motivation =1 Take Risks = 2 Involve Others = 3 Have a Vision = 4 Build a Team = 5 Communicate = 6 Establish Guidelines = 7 Develop Trust and Respect = 8
Model = 9 Be Organized = 10 Have a System = 11 Celebrate Successes = 12 Staff Development = 13 Other = 14 Power = 15 Listened = 16
58-63 Character Description List Exciting = i Rewarding = 2 Self-Satisfying = 3 Educationally Sound = 4 Good for Kids = 5 Unifying = 6 First Class (High Quality) = 7
Powerful = 8 Successful = 9 Other =10
I l l
64 Felt Character Satisfied = l Rewarded = 2 Excited = 3 Fulfilled = 4 Appreciated = 5 Frustrated = 6 Successful = 7 Relief = 8 Accomplishment = 9 Anxiety =10 Other = 11
65 Learn Leadership
66 Teach Leadership
67 Most Difference Leadership
A Process Was Involved = 1 My Style Suits Me =2 Much of Leadership Style Development Was Self-Development = 3
Specific Practices Led to the Success of the Project = 4
My Style Influenced the Practices = 5
Other = 6
Search for Opportunities = 1
Take Risks = 2 Envision = 3 Invdve Others = 4 Motivate = 5 Empower = 6 Model = 7 Communicate = 8 Celebrate and Reward = 9 Have a System = 10 Develop Trust and Respect = 1i
Establish Guidelines = 12 Other = 13
Searched for Opportunities = 1
Took Risks = 2 Envisioned = 3 Invoh/ed Others = 4 Motivated = 5 Empowered = 6 Modeled = 7 Communicated = 8 Celebrated and Rewarded = 9
Had a System = 10 Developed Trust and Respect = 11
Established Gukjelines = 12 Other = 13
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68 Quote Leadership See Attached Sheets
69 Remembered Conclusion
70 Selection Conclusion
71 How Learned Conclusion
Change Agent = 1 Caring = 2 Make a Difference = 3 Good for Education = 4 Organized = 5 Participatory Decision = 6 Respected = 7 Competent = 8 Innovative = 9 Fair = 10 Honest = 11 Tried to do Their Best = 12
Good for Kids = 1 Made a Difference = 2 Educationally Sound = 3 Teacher involvement = 4 Self-Satisfaction = 5 Increased Site District Unity = 6
Board Suggested = 7 Other = 3
Experience (Previous Practices) = 1
Coursework/Fomnal Education = 2
Learned From Others = 3 Hardships Endured = 4 Trial and Error = 5 Bom with Leadership Skills = 6
Reading = 7 Other = 8
DATA CODING: "PERSONAL BEST"
CODER: 1.
4.
6.
8.
9.
10. 23. 36. 49. 62.
11. 24. 37. 50. 63.
12. 25. 38. 51. 64.
13. 26. 39. 52. 65.
14. 27. 40. 53. 66.
15. 28. 41. 54. 67.
16. 29. 42. 55. 68.
17. 30. 43. 56. 69.
18. 31. 44. 57. 70.
19. 32. 45. 58. 71.
20. 33. 46. 59.
21. 34. 47. 60.
22. 35. 48. 61.
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CODER WORKSHOP
MARCH 2 & 3, 1990 BANNING, CALIFORNIA
A G E N D A
OVERVIEW
OBJECTIVES
TIMELINES
SURVEY SAMPLES
COOING MAP
A. CODE DISAGREEMENTS - PROCESS 3. CHANGES & EXPANSION - PROCESS
INTERCODER RELIABILITY
A. EXAMPLES & PRACTICE
COMPUTER PROGRAM
SURVEY WORK
A. CHECK ON INTERCOOER RELIABILITY B. COOING MAP CHECK
QUESTION & ANSWER
WRAPUP
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APPENDIX D
PERSONAL BEST QUOTES AND SLOGANS
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PERSONAL BEST QUOTES
1. "There will be times when you question your motives for becoming an educational leader at those times remember, we are in this business for kids."
2. "Use the advice of the staff that you employ."
3. Theory T Works!"
4. "A good leader is actually like a sheep herder. You have to herd them in the right direction."
5. "Leadership is your capacity to work with others to achieve the established organization purposes and to still respect each other after achieving the purposes."
6. 'The quality of a person's life is in direct proportion to their level of commitment, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor."
7. "If you try to please everyone in the grandstands, you'll end up sitting up there with them."
8. "Art celebrates humanities' grandeur; politics its folly."
9. To be successful, a leader needs to be a great planner and show enormous enthusiasm for what he does."
10. "Building the trust level is the glue holding the organization together."
11. "Go for it."
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12. "Never underestimate those you're dealing with - those for or against you (on the cause).
13. "Listen to diverse points of view, gather data, and share a dream."
14. "Personal success can be silent as long as it is mirrored by the learning and growth of others."
15. "Listen, act, and achieve."
16. "Have confidence in people."
17. "Life's greatest rewards come in the service to others."
18. "I can make friends with competent people - but I can't make my friends competent."
19. "Set high expectations for yourself AND expect no less of those who also serve the organization."
20. "Believe in yourself, your thoughts, your actions, and want it badly enough to do the work that is required. Be grateful and allow others to buy into what could be a successful venture."
21. "The ultimate achievement is always at the end of a lonesome path."
22. "Know what you stand for, and stand for it. If it's good for kids, do it. Don't tell me how it can't be done; tell me how it s§n be done."
23. "Make decisions on the basis of what is good for the organization and all children, rather than on the basis of the 'scream' factor."
24. "Be yourself and be honest."
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25. "Friends come and go, enemies accumulate."
26. "We are in the process of becoming."
27. "The more power you give away, the more powerful you will become."
28. "Lead as you would like to be led."
29. "Winners never quit, quitters never win."
30. "Give people support and encouragement and stand aside to applaud - they'll accomplish amazing things."
31. "Helping others helps you."
32. "Educational leadership is not a solitary function, rather it is the function of unlocking the talents of the group - of the entire profession."
33. "You never know what you can do until you try!"
34. "Spend considerable time and attention seeking opportunities that are not routinely obvious."
35. "The ability to understand the situation, the players' readiness level, and your own power position and ability, is key as we situationally manage."
38. "Know yourself and your strengths and weaknesses."
37. "Every vision needs a plan."
38. "Leaders are people who know what to do when they don't know."
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39. "A good leader inspires people to have confidence in their leader; a great leader inspires people to have confidence in themselves!"
40. "To be a good leader, you must first learn to be a good follower."
41. "Leadership is setting priorities and goals, the ability to delegate responsibilities, having two-way communication, being available for consultation and making the hard decision, and by setting a good example."
42. 'Together we can."
43. "Celebrate your successes!! No matter how small!!"
44. "Know your dates and the individuals' skills and emotional strengths before delegating responsibilities."
45. "Schools will get better if we focus on what is best for children."
46. "Have high expectations for everyone involved. When this occurs, any obstacle can be addressed."
47. "We were given a 'Super Opportunity'."
48. "Anything not monitored is optional."
49. "Leaders have to have a dream, a vision that they care about passionately enough to persevere in the toughest of times."
50. "Enjoy the contests and successes, which show your skills; and laugh at your failures, which prove your humanity."
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PERSONAL BEST SLOGANS
1. "Together We Can." (3)
2. 'To 'rise above' the adversary."
3. "Quality education through a shared commitment of the school, home, and community."
4. "Increase efficiency and productivity."
5. That all children can and will learn."
6. "A middle school that matters."
7. "Santee School District - where open minds meet open doors."
8. "We dare to dream!"
9. "We must gain control of our own districts before the onslaught of houses and students."
10. "Count your blessings."
11. "Win - Win, Fair."
12. "The process of becoming."
13. "With Excellence in Mind."
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14. "What's Best for Kids."
15. "Communication the Key to Understanding."
16. 'Technology Across the Curriculum."
17. 'To improve 'Conditions of the Workplace'."
18. "If you think you can...you can. If you think you can't...you can't."
19. "We Are Family."
20. "Literature Created Community Ownership."
21. "Choice."
22. "South Bay the One to Watch."
23. "Only 'YRE"."